I usually am on the organic train, but I have been using veg bloom. its basically jacks w/ the organic additives most people would buy to add to jacks. enzymes, amino acids, humic acid, microbes, etc. from what I understand in the race to the bottom for commercial fertilizer costs, many large facilities choose jacks A and B.I like my Jack's Classic still, fuck all that snake oil! It works of course, you do have all the necessary micro and macro nutrients in so called "cannabis specific nutrients". When it really comes down to it you can grow some of the best weed in shit and you can't tell me a perfect recipe for cannabis. I wouldn't use bat guano either just because of the price and really duck and rabbit shit are better than a lot of bat guano's and they shit a lot. Lol
That's the way to grow really organic.Hey guys, personally I use worm castes, Bat/seabird guano, kelp,mycorrhizae and other organic products
I have been playing around with super soils also
Unfortunately most of the products available in Australia aren't the greatest
There are however small time producers that supply a high quality product, but prices are exy
I have grown using nothing but Guonos after Soma praising the back in n the day
Although yeild was affected, the final product was easily the highest quality most flavourful herb I have ever grown!
Organics are definitely worth getting into for Highest quality end product
That's just my opinion however
Sensient ✌
I use masterblend which is almost like jacks. However the ratio used is 2 2 1 in its case. Mostly omit the epsom salts when feeding in peat and soil based mediums . I use them all when in coco though.Only give the plant what it needs and nothing else.
For me that was Jack's 5-12-26 + Calcium Nitrate + Epsom salts in a 3:2:1 ratio, with the epsom salts varying more than the first two. Now I'm in a coco coir + perlite/pumice medium and I have switched to Canna Coco which IS much more expensive but I no longer use RO water (it's formulated for tap water) and it does seem to address the Calcium issue that seems to be coir's biggest drawback.
Almost anything will work. Cheaper things GENERALLY take more thought to get things right, expensive tend to be "Plug and play". For me personally, I like to figure things out so I've played with all the cheap stuff over the years and it's usually served me well.