Using Calcium sulfate during flower

Week4@inCharge

Well-Known Member
Why are you pro calcium during flowering?
From "week 4" challenges from the past. WAnt to flip[ the script ands see what it ends like. My plant seem to need it. the other plants, the one next to it,,the soil got spiked by a silica overdose. liitle up there.. 7.2pH sooOOooooOooo checky that soily before adding the Calciumy
 

Week4@inCharge

Well-Known Member
Can you explain further?
edit: The short answer is the article (if we're talking about the same article) was written by a scientist. She explains how our flowers during Veg will hardly react to a little calcium. It's when they change, the flip to flower, is when that reaction comes to light. (I'd have to read that article again but it seems like she was dealing with a toxicity issue but her findings were based off a study) Most growers (young growers) find that problems usually hit by the 4th week of flower. She believes it's the calcium. She explains in detail as to why if I could find that copy I'll paste it here but I was sold on the idea. Now I'm finding that.( a year later) calcium is important during the first 4 weeks of flowering. From multiple sources. the second half of flower magnesium and potassium is the important nutrient. Got Langbeinite?
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My 2 cents guys, don't take me to cannabis court on this,
 
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Week4@inCharge

Well-Known Member
Here's a great article. Only problem... no actual data.
OH NOOOOOO.... Maximum Yield just shut down Goodbye from Maximum Yield

And I don't think I saved it.

Edit.. found another source....
Debunking the Cal/Mag Myth in Cannabis Cultivation – Nature's Gateway (hamanol.com)
And that's the article, finally had a chance to read it and yes thats that same article that was in Maximum Yield. It's a little misleading on a first read. If you read it again on the context of Calcium Toxicity then it would make more sense vs just reading it as an anti Calcium article. Dealing with tap water with a high ppm (350) and then reading that article can cause some alarm to a few growers, it did to me. So a year later I've had lots of success using RO filtered water negating some of the problem solving without the tap water in the equation. My tap is high in Calcium Carbonate but I'm suspecting that the ions of that calcium bind with the calcium in the pots causing them to lockup in the soil. Nothing proven just a suspicion. With the better experience/luck using RO filtered water it only strengthens my thoughts on that.
 
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Week4@inCharge

Well-Known Member
I have some gypsum on hand but after looking deeper into it had no idea the controversy behind it's use. You guys probably have a deeper understanding using the stuff. One video demonstrates how to test your soil to see if it could even benefit from gypsum. Seems like clay soil is where gypsum shines. On another video it's said to pull Magnesium away from the top soil (about 11 inches) it bounds with the magnesium molecules and pulls them away. Do we want that happening in our soil?
 

Week4@inCharge

Well-Known Member
Then you have guys like Build A Soil who have a major hardon for Gypsum... so go figure.. they even mix it into their Craft Blend.

Ingredients all Equal by Weight:
  1. Thorvin Premium Kelp Meal
  2. Wild Flax Seed Meal
  3. Alfalfa Meal
  4. BuildASoil Organic High P Bran
  5. Camelina Meal
  6. Crustacean Meal
  7. Fish Meal
  8. 3x Fish Bone Meal
  9. Soybean Meal
  10. Sul-Po-Mag (Also Known as K-Mag or Langbeinite)
  11. Organic Malted Barley
  12. Volcanic Tuff
  13. Micronized Basalt - Blue Ridge Meta
  14. Gypsum
  15. Oyster Flour



 

BeauVida

Member
Gypsum is not getting into the plant for a month after application. That's why it works better than calnit. Because it never gets in. Cannabis's preferred calcium source is guano. Stop pushing calcium when you stop P. Makes sense.

Gypsum is not plant available. Foliar spray a plant for a cycle if it's absorbed.
 
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