First off, a PPM meter, is measuring your 'total dissolved solids', which is how much stuff is in your water, besides water. Think of your PPM like you would 'salt', it might help. For example, if you started with a glass of pure water(which has a PPM of zero, meaning nothing is dissolved in it) and added a tablespoon of salt, stirred it and let it dissolve, your PPMs might be 1000. Now, if you added another tablespoon, your PPMs would be about 2000. When you check your soil runoff, the water is flowing down through the soil, picking up all the crap that is unused by the plant, and running out the bottom. When I flush my plants, I use my TDS(PPM) meter, and flush til my runoff is around 100, which tells me the soil is pretty damn clean. Then, the plants get a fresh start, because I know EXACTLY what I'm giving them, and don't have to 'guess' what kind of crap is already in the soil, left unused from the previous feeding, or perhaps, came with the soil, to begin with. That's the point of flushing, in your case, aside from bringing the PH to where you want it. When you flush at the end of harvest(if you choose to), it's also to clean your medium, but for a different reason...to make for a cleaner final product, free of excess nutes/chemicals.
So, if your runoff PPM is really high, it means you're overfeeding them, or that they aren't able to feed, because the PH is off, or whatever the case my be. At any rate, it's time to back off til you get the problem straightened out, 'cause you're heading for nutelock. Too much 'nutrient X' will lock out 'nutrient Y', which is why a flush is always a good thing, it eliminates the guesswork, trying to figure out what nutrients are bulit-up in your soil. Never just quit feeding til your PPMs come down, if they are really high, unless you are a risk-taker,lol or have the experience to KNOW what's in your soil. It's always safer to flush, then feed, if necessary. If you flush, and the plant is already showing deficiencies, it's always wise to feed them right after you're done flushing, or else they'll further starve, til you put nutes back in the soil.(assuming you've flushed thoroughly)
I hope that helped some?
First off, a PPM meter, is measuring your 'total dissolved solids', which is how much stuff is in your water, besides water. Think of your PPM like you would 'salt', it might help. For example, if you started with a glass of pure water(which has a PPM of zero, meaning nothing is dissolved in it) and added a tablespoon of salt, stirred it and let it dissolve, your PPMs might be 1000. Now, if you added another tablespoon, your PPMs would be about 2000. When you check your soil runoff, the water is flowing down through the soil, picking up all the crap that is unused by the plant, and running out the bottom. When I flush my plants, I use my TDS(PPM) meter, and flush til my runoff is around 100, which tells me the soil is pretty damn clean. Then, the plants get a fresh start, because I know EXACTLY what I'm giving them, and don't have to 'guess' what kind of crap is already in the soil, left unused from the previous feeding, or perhaps, came with the soil, to begin with. That's the point of flushing, in your case, aside from bringing the PH to where you want it. When you flush at the end of harvest(if you choose to), it's also to clean your medium, but for a different reason...to make for a cleaner final product, free of excess nutes/chemicals.
So, if your runoff PPM is really high, it means you're overfeeding them, or that they aren't able to feed, because the PH is off, or whatever the case my be. At any rate, it's time to back off til you get the problem straightened out, 'cause you're heading for nutelock. Too much 'nutrient X' will lock out 'nutrient Y', which is why a flush is always a good thing, it eliminates the guesswork, trying to figure out what nutrients are bulit-up in your soil. Never just quit feeding til your PPMs come down, if they are really high, unless you are a risk-taker,lol or have the experience to KNOW what's in your soil. It's always safer to flush, then feed, if necessary. If you flush, and the plant is already showing deficiencies, it's always wise to feed them right after you're done flushing, or else they'll further starve, til you put nutes back in the soil.(assuming you've flushed thoroughly)
I hope that helped some?
Pretty much the definitive guide for a noob like me!lol! I see i was asking the wrong question about ppm.
What more can i say, pretty much killed the thread with that jawbrodt!lol
I guess this ties into having regular flushes to give you a fresh starting point before a problem happens. I see a flush a month is what seems to be best so in that month alternate waterings and ferts i would probably feed 3 times and water 3 times at max. So i give myself a fresh start after 3 ferts. Just some ideas and seeing that the ferts are cycled through the soil a lot quicker than i was doing. Dose this seem right now pH and ppm has been thoroughly explained?
I cannot ppm my biobizz bloom as it is organic, the grow dose but not the bloom so i still have to add ml per litre and watered into soil this, i take it, is broken down in the soil by the living micorherd and made available for the plant hence giving me ppm in my runoff?
Thanks for the post before jawbroldt, truly decisive and totally clears up ppm and then some. Thanks
Lime is also one of my gardens favorite amendments. In the future, add it to your mix before use. It works slow in the first place, mixed in, and if used as a top dressing, it really takes some time.
Just don't keep adding it, unless you under applied in the first place.
All I've used is peat based mixes for well over 30 years, and lime is essential for that medium.
Wet
IF it's the fine ground. The coarse stuff take months to do anything.Depends on the type of lime on how fast it acts. Dolomitic lime has an almost instant(a few days) effect....
IF it's the fine ground. The coarse stuff take months to do anything.
There's no way coarse grade dolomitic lime is gonna be effective in less than 2 weeks if it's mixed prior to planting. Probably, more like a monthThe polymers they use to 'pelletize' most garden lime breaks down all most instantly when it gets wet, you can even make a drench out of it. Fine ground or course really makes no difference. Like I said, its the type of lime that matters....
There's no way coarse grade dolomitic lime is gonna be effective in less than 2 weeks if it's mixed prior to planting. Probably, more like a month
or 2. Greater surface area = faster acting.
I understand what you're saying, but most soil's ph is fairly stable to begin with, it's usually only after the peat starts breaking down that it drops. If that's the case then the lime isn't taking the soil to an acceptable range as much as it is just keeping it stable. It could've taken a month to work, but wasn't even needed until then. I agree that you prolly don't want to actually turn it to powder. When I say 'fine' I mean about like this o.I don't know man I use the dolomite pellets and they keep my soil pretty stable from the get go. Maybe it depends on the brand, my pellets also dissolve in water fairly quickly. The powder might also drain through the mix alot faster while the pellets are a more stable slow release. There is a reason they come in pellet form its not a joke being played on gardeners.
I understand what you're saying, but most soil's ph is fairly stable to begin with, it's usually only after the peat starts breaking down that it drops. If that's the case then the lime isn't taking the soil to an acceptable range as much as it is just keeping it stable. It could've taken a month to work, but wasn't even needed until then. I agree that you prolly don't want to actually turn it to powder. When I say 'fine' I mean about like this o.
"the use of pelletized lime is more desirable. Not only is it a cleaner material to apply then the old powdery grade, pelletized lime tends to stay where you spread it. Wind and water runoff won't affect it nearly as much as the powder grade so use the pellet if you can find it. "
http://www.soil-ph.com/soil-ph