Welcome to the Growery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!
So recently my interest of hydroponics has been sparked. I recently came across this article and it seems pretty legit. I guess you can move young plants from soil to hydro. I will be willing to test this soon. I just feel if you can go from hydro to soil, why not be able to go from soil to hydro. Read this article.
Ive actually taken plants out of soil and thrown them into hydro.they grow super fast and strong.the roots are a crazy thing my Friend!!when you take them out of soil" depending on how long they were in there of course"they have a system going on.when you stick them in hydro man they kick into overdrive.
Quote: Dephect said: I guess you can move young plants from soil to hydro. I will be willing to test this soon. I just feel if you can go from hydro to soil, why not be able to go from soil to hydro.
Haha, you have very sound logic my friend! This is actually how I did my grow.
-------------------- andyistic said: Ok so let me bring you idiots up to speed.
The admins are tired of this shitfest being made the joke of the weed community on the Internet.
Those are coarse coco fibers you are talking about correct? Are they just like peat pellets? Like you would use them along with hydroton or something else?
Quote: Dephect said: Those are coarse coco fibers you are talking about correct?
Yeah, the trade name is coco peat or coco coir.
Quote: Dephect said:Are they just like peat pellets? Like you would use them along with hydroton or something else?
Mix 50/50 with perlite or hydroton or some of both. Coir doesn't have the bacteria or fungal spores that you will find in peat. If you don't sterilize the coir it will also have beneficial trichoderma. You can re-use it grow after grow, it is odorless, light weight, easy to handle, and a 100% renewable resource. It only has 60% water-filled space, the rest is air-filled so plants love the shit.