Cannabis and pH

Smokin Moose

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex Moderator
pH

The pH is a measure of how alkaline (bitter) or acid (sour) the soil is. The pH balance affects the solubility of nutrients, and helps the plant regulate metabolism and nutrient uptake. The scale for measuring pH runs from 0 to 14, with 7 assigned as neutral. A pH below 7 is acid; a pH above 7 is alkaline.

Marijuana grows in soils with a pH range from 5 to 8.5, but it thrives in nearly neutral soils. Relative to other field crops, it has high lime requirements, similar to those for red or white clover or sunflower. But it does well in fields where plants with medium lime requirements, such as corn, wheat, and peanuts, are grown.

The solubility of nutrients is affected by soil type as well as by the pH. In soils with a high content of organic matter, all nutrients are soluble between 5.0 and 6.5. Phosphorous, manganese, and boron are less soluble at pH values above 6.5. Acid soils are usually found in the United States east of the 100th meridian and along parts of the West Coast, and a deep topsoil layer. Marijuana does best in acid soils when the pH is adjusted to a range of 6.3 to 7.0. {Figure 58. Map of pH for US.}

Mineral soils in the dry western states may be slightly acid to highly alkaline. Most nutrients are very soluble in these soils, as long as the pH ranges from 6.0 to 7.5. Some of these soils are too alkaline (over 8.5); so their pH must be adjusted to near neutral to ensure healthy growth.

Adjusting the pH

First test the soil pH in the garden area. Previous gardeners may have adjusted native soils, or your yard soil may have been trucked in to cover poor native soils, so that the pH of your garden soil may be different from that of other soils in the area. Different soils vary in the amount of material needed to adjust the pH. Sandy soils do not require as much as loam, and loam requires less than clays, partly because of the chemistry, and partly because of the density and physical qualities of the soils' particles.

Adjusting Acid Soils

Acidic soils are treated with limestone, which is expressed as an equivalent of calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Limestone is usually quarried and powdered, contains large amounts of trace elements, and comes in different chemical forms: ground limestone, quicklime, and hydrated lime (which is the fastest acting form). Dolomitic limestone is high in magnesium and is often used to adjust magnesium-deficient soils, such as those found in New England. Marl (ground seashells) is also mostly lime and is used to raise soil pH. Eggshells are another source of lime. They should be powdered as finely as possible, but even so, they take a long time to affect the soil. Wood ashes are alkaline and very soluble; so they have an almost immediate effect.

Every commercial lime has a calcium carbonate equivalent or neutralising power which is listed on the package. To find out how much to use, divide the total amount of limestone required by the pH test (see Figure 59) by the calcium carbonate equivalent. For instance, a field requires fifty pounds of limestone, but the calcic limestone you are using has an equivalent of 1.78. Divide the 50 by 1.78. The resulting figure, about 29 pounds, is the amount required. Commercial limes also list the grade or particle size of the powder. In order of fineness they are: superfine, pulverised, agricultural grade, and fine meal. The finer the grade, the faster the action. {Figure 59. Approximate amount of lime required to adjust pH of a 7" layer of different types of soil.}

For best results, lime should be added at least four or five months before planting. In this way, the lime has a chance to react with the soil. But acid soils can be limed profitably and time before planting, or after, as long as the lime does not come into direct contact with the plants. Most growers add lime at the same time that they fertilise and turn the soil. That way, tilling and conditioning are handled in one operation. The lime should be worked into the soil to a depth of ten inches. Lime can also be added by spreading it before a rain. Make sure that the soil is moist enough to absorb the rain, so that the lime does not run off. Growers who have not adjusted the pH can dissolve lime in water before they irrigate. However, this is not advised if the water runs through a hose or pump, because mineral buildup may occur in the equipment.

Adjusting Alkaline Soils

Most alkaline soils have a pH no higher than 7.5, which is within the range for optimum growth. Soils that are too alkaline can be adjusted by adding gypsum, which frees insoluble salts, and include iron, magnesium, and aluminium sulphate. Marijuana has a low tolerance for aluminium; so marijuana growers should use iron or magnesium sulphate in preference to aluminium sulphate. Sulphur and gypsum are worked into the soil in the same manner as lime.
{Table 19.}

Some growers correct alkaline soils by adding an organic mulch or by working acidic material into the soil. Cottonseed meal, which is acidic and high in nitrogen, can also be used. As it breaks down, cottonseed meal neutralises the soil. Pine needles, citrus rinds, and coffee grounds are all very acidic, and can be used to correct alkaline conditions. The addition of soluble nitrogen fertilisers aids the breakdown of these low-nitrogen additives. (See Table 22 in the section on "Fertilisers" in this section.)

Adjusting Alkali Soils

Alkali soils (pH usually above 8.5) are hardpacked and crusty, and sometimes have an accumulation of white powdery salts at the surface. They may not absorb water easily and can be extremely difficult to work. To prepare alkali soils with a permeable subsurface for cultivation, farmers leach them of their toxic accumulation of salts. The soils is thoroughly moistened so that it absorbs water. Then it is flooded so that the salts travel downward out of contact with the roots. Gypsum can be added to free some of the salts so that they leach out more easily. Gypsum can be added at the rate of 75 lbs per 100 sq.ft., or 18 tons per acre. Leaching requires enormous quantities of water, an efficient irrigation system, and several months.
{Plate 1. Skylights are a good source of bright, unobstructed light. Thai plant (closest) and Colombian plants reached over 14 feet in six months. Plate 2. Top: A hidden garden using fluorescent light, foil reflectors, and bag containers. Plants are ten weeks old. Bottom: Simple to construct dome greenhouse in southern California. At two months, some of these plants are six feet tall. Plate 3. Upper left: Stem of a female plant. Upper right: In full sunlight, a pruned plant can grow incredibly dense. Bottom: A garden in the wilds of Oregon mountains. Plate 4. Marijuana does well in most gardens. Top: Here a female plant is in early bloom at five months. The main stem was clipped at three months (Berkeley). Middle: Lower branches are spread out to catch the sun. Bottom: A female bud about two weeks before harvest. Leaves show some damage from leafhoppers (insects shown). Plate 5. A giant sinsemilla cola grown from Mexican seed in northern California. Plate 6. Top: Purple colours often appear late in life, when vigour is waning. Lower left: Resin glands glistening on a purple, female flowering shoot. Lower right: Yellow male flowers and purple leaves against a normal green leaf. Plate 7. Top: Male flowers at different stages in development. A line of resin glands can be seen on the anthers of the open flowers. Lower left: Resin glands lining the pollen slit of an anther (x40). Middle right: Male flowers in full bloom. The leaves are covered with fallen pollen. Lower right: Gland heads may fall with the pollen grains. Mature grains are spherical in field of focus (x40). Plate 8. Top: Resin glands on the lower (adaxial) surface of a small, fresh leaf blade. Integrals are one millimetre (x16). Middle and lower left: Stalked glands are concentrated along the veins of the lower leaf surface (x40). Lower right (x100). Plate 9. Top: Upper (adaxial) fresh leaf surface. Left of picture, from left to right: Sharp-pointed cystolith hair, stalked gland, and tiny bulbous gland (x40). Lower left: Upper surface of a Thai leaf (x16). Lower right: Upper surface of fresh homegrown Colombian leaf (x40). Plate 10. A young female flower (homegrown Colombian). Resin glands are not yet fully developed (x16). Plate 11. Top left: A mature female flower from the same plant is in Plate 10. The flower bract is swollen from the ripe seed it contains. Notice the well-developed resin glands (x25). Top right: A mixture of seeds from common marijuana varieties shows comparative size. Bottom: The tip of a sinsemilla flower at harvest. Notice cream-coloured stigmas to the left and the fresh, clear resin glands (x40). Plate 12. Upper and lower left: An overly ripe sinsemilla flower bract. Many gland heads are brown or missing (top, x16; bottom, x40). Upper and lower right: Carefully handled Thai weed with intact glands. Notice the high concentration of glands and very long stalks on this bract (top, x16; bottom, x40). Plate 13. Upper and lower left: A Colombian Gold. Gland contents are brown and stalks have deteriorated on this bract (top, x16; bottom, x40). Top right: Hawaiian; well-handled and showing little deterioration (bract x40). Middle right: Gland heads easily detach from stalks when overripe (leaf vein x40). Lower right: Stalked glands on both upper and lower leaf surfaces beginning to brown (leaf margin x40). Plate 14. Top: Whitefly larvae and their honeydew excretions on the lower surface of a leaf. Middle left: Leaf showing whitefly damage and a tiny adult. Lower left: White speckles on leaves indicating mite damage. Lower right: An overdose, or overuse of pesticide, can kill the plant. Plate 15. Upper left: Healthy green plant next to a N-deficient plant. Middle left: Ultraviolet burn. Plant was moved outdoors without conditioning. Lower left: "Bonsai" marijuana grown from a cutting. Upper right: Mg-deficient plant has chlorotic leaves dying from their tips. Lower right: Afghani variety, with characteristically wide leaf blades, show minor symptoms of N deficiency (pale leaves and red petioles). Plate 16. Upper left: Male flowers lose some green and turn "blond" during slow drying. Upper right: Cigar joints made with undried marijuana, which is wrapped with lone blades of fan leaves before drying. Bottom: Sequence shows change in colour in one day from sun curing.{Unfortunately, all the plates are in black and white.}}

Another method of reclaiming alkali soils is by adding a thick mulch and letting it interact with the soil during the winter. The mulch should be about nine inches thick, or 130 lbs or more per 100 sq.ft. This thick layer neutralises the salts and also helps to retain moisture.

Nutrients

Marijuana is a high-energy plant which grows quickly to its full potential in a fertile soil that is rich in available nutrients. Nutrients are found in the soil's parent materials: sand, clay, humus, minerals, rocks, and water. Nutrients dissolve in soil water (soil solution), which is then absorbed by the plant. In complex chemical processes, roots release ions in exchange for nutrients that are dissolved in the soil solution.

The soil acts as a reservoir for the nutrients. Most of them are in non-exchangeable forms: that is, they do not dissolve, or dissolve only slightly in water. Only a small percentage of the total reserve is free at any time as the result of chemical processes or microbial action. Healthy soils maintain a balance between free and unavailable nutrients, so that the plants they support continually receive the right amounts of required nutrients. Alkali soils have large supplies of compounds which are extremely soluble. The solution is so concentrated that alkali soils are often toxic to plants.

There are three primary nutrients, N (nitrogen), P (phosphorus), and K (potassium). These are the nutrients that gardeners are most likely to be concerned with and which most fertilisers supply. Soils are most likely to be deficient in one of these nutrients, especially N.

In addition to the primary nutrients, soil supplies plants with three secondary nutrients, Ca (calcium), Mg (magnesium), and S (sulfur), and seven micronutrients: iron, boron, chlorine, manganese, copper, zinc, and molybdenum. Although deficiencies of all the secondary and micronutrients are reported from various parts of the United States, serious deficiencies do not occur often. ((For a discussion of the symptoms of nutrient deficiencies is marijuana, see section 9.))

Marijuana absorbs nutrients primarily through a fine network of lateral roots which grow from the taproot. Lateral roots may spread over an area with a diameter of five feet, and may go as deep as the roots can penetrate. Plants in deep sandy soils or in soils that have porous mineral subsoils may grow roots as deep as even seven feet. Roots which can absorb nutrients from a larger area are more likely to fulfil the plants' needs than are shallow roots which result in shallow topsoil layers over compacted subsoils. When the roots have a large area from which to absorb nutrients, the soil does not need to be as fertile as when the roots are restricted to a small area by poor soil or by being grown in pots.

You can get a good indication of soil fertility by observing the vegetation that the soil supports. If the vegetation is varied, has a lush look to it, is deep green, and looks vigorous, it is probably well-supplied with nutrients. If the plants look pale, yellowed, spindly, weak, or generally unhealthy, the soil is probably deficient in one or more nutrients.

Testing

Agricultural colleges, County Extension Agents, and private companies perform soil analyses for a small fee from a sample you mail to them. The tests include nutrient, pH, and texture analyses, and are very accurate. There are also simple-to-use test kits available at nurseries and garden shops which give a fair indication of soil fertility and pH. Test results include a suggested fertiliser and lime program catered to the soil's individual requirements for the crop to be planted. Marijuana has nutrient requirements similar to those for corn, wheat, and sugarcane, and prefers just a little more lime (a more alkaline soil) than those crops; so soil can be fertilised as it would be for those crops.

Soil tests are one indication of soil fertility. They test for available nutrients, but not for reserves that are held in the soil. Test results may also vary because of recent rainfall, changes of moisture content, and seasonal changes. Most soil tests do not measure the ability of the soil to make nutrients available. This is a very important factor when considering a fertiliser program and should not be overlooked. As an example, an uncultivated field showed only moderate amounts of N available, and indicated a need for N fertiliser. The vegetation - tall grass, weeds, and bush - had a healthy look and was dark green, and the lower leaves remained healthy. Obviously, the soil was able to supply an adequate amount of N to the plants, which withdrew it from the soil solution as it became available. The soil and plants had reached a balance, and the soil solution slowly became more dilute over the course of the season.

To a great extent, the soil's ability to maintain a constant and adequate supply of nutrients depends on the soil's humus content. Humus can support dense populations of microorganisms. As part of their life processes, microorganisms decompose organic matter in the humus. Nutrients contained in the organic matter are released by microbes as simply inorganic molecules (e.g., NO3) which can dissolve in soil water. Generally, soils with a high humus content can keep plants supplied with more nutrients than soil tests indicate.

The Primary Nutrients

If you look at any fertiliser package, you will note three numbers on the package. They stand for N-P-K, always in that order. Marijuana does best in a soil which supplies high amounts of N and medium amounts of P and K.

Nitrogen

The availability of N is the factor most likely to limit the growth of marijuana. For fast healthy growth, marijuana requires a soil rich in available N. Nitrogen is constantly being replaced in the soil solution by microbial breakdown of organic matter. Some microorganisms can use N directly from the atmosphere. They release N as waste in the form NO3, which is the primary form in which plants absorb N. A small amount of N is also dissolved in falling rainwater. When the soil is moist, it loses N through leaching and to plants. In its available form (NO3, NO2, NH4), N is very soluble and may be carried away with runoff or may drain into the subsoil.

Probably the most accurate method of measuring a soil's ability to produce N is by the percentage of organic matter in the soil (see Table 20). Organic matter releases N at a rate that is determined by the type of soil, the temperature, and the moisture. Generally, the more aerated and warmer the soil, the faster organic matter decomposes and releases N. Most professional testing services report the percentage of organic matter, and some sophisticated kits can also test for it.

In its available state, N is tested in two compounds, ammonium (NH4) and nitrate (NO3). Test results are converted into PPM (parts per million) of N and then added to arrive at the total amount of N available in the soil. The formulas to convert nitrate and ammonium to N are (NO3) * 0.226 = N, (NH4) * 0.78 = N. Each PPM indicates 10.7 pounds of N per acre available in the top 7.87 inches. If the soil level is deeper, there is probably more N available. If it is shallower, less is available. But a test for available N gives only a fair approximation of the soil's ability to feed the plant. An individual test may be untypical because of recent leaching or depletion during the growing season.

An intensively cultivated crop of hemp takes about 250 pounds of N per acre or six pounds per 1,000 square feet from the soil during the growing season. When the plants are spaced well apart, the crop does not require as much N.

Fields which have more than 200 lbs of available N per acre (or 4.5 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft.) at the start of the growing season require no additional fertilisation. Soils with less available N will probably yield a larger crop if they are given additional N. Actually, the amount of N that can profitably be used depends on the soil and its potential to produce N as well as on other factors: how fast N is lost, the soil depth, and moisture content.

One way to calculate the amount of N to add to the soil is to build your soil to an "ideal" level. For example, an Iowa silt loam may test about 1.6 pounds of N per 1,000 sq.ft. and an organic content of 3 percent. Together, the available and potential N total about 3.2 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft. To increase the available N to 4.5 per 1,000 sp.ft., you would need to add 1.3 lbs of N.

Phosphorus

P is an important nutrient which is used directly by the soil bacteria as well as by the plant, so that an increase in the amount of P in the soil often results in an increase of N. Because of P's low solubility, it is rarely leached from the soil. It is usually found in the greatest concentration in the soil's top layers, where it accumulates as a result of decomposition of organic matter.

In slightly acid organic soil, up to one percent of the total P is available at any time. The total amounts of P in soils range from 1,000 to 10,000 lbs per acre. For example, a typical Kansas prairie soil has 3,000 lbs per acre. In soils with a lower pH, more of the P is tied up in insoluble compounds of iron or aluminium. In highly alkaline soils, the P forms insoluble compounds with calcium.

Insoluble P reacts with the dilute acids that are released during decomposition of organic matter. These compounds are available to the plants. Both the chemical processes in which P is released and the organic processes of decomposition occur faster in warm soils.

If P is available, young plants absorb it rapidly, and may take in 50 percent of their lifetime intake by the time they are only 25 percent of their adult size. Young plants grown outdoors in cold weather may grow slowly until the soil warms up and more P is available. Older plants grown out of season in cold weather sometimes exhibit purple leaves. This condition may result from a P deficiency, because of the unavailability of P at low temperatures.

Most soil-test kits test available P, but the nutrient value of P is usually expressed as phosphoric acid (P2O5), which is converted using the formulas P * 2.3 = (P2O5),(P2O5) divided by 2.3 = P. Any soil that has available P of 25 lbs per acre (0.58 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft.) or more is well-supplied with P. Stated in terms of phosphoric acid, this is 25 * 2.3 = 57.5 lbs per acre (1.33 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft.).

Most inexpensive soil kits test available P. Soil that test less than 1 PPM or 10.7 lbs per acre (0.25 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft.) of available P should be tested to make sure there are adequate reserves, or can be fertilised to assure maximum yield. Soil-test kits give only a fair indication of the P available. A low reading may indicate the plants are absorbing P as fast as it breaks down from its unavailable form, especially during early growth! The main factors affecting the rate at which P becomes available are the total amount of reserve P in the soil and the pH.

Most professional soil analyses include a report of reserve P. Generally soils with reserve P of 3,000 lbs per acre (70 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft.) do not need additional P. Intensively cultivated and cropped fields may have had their reserve supply depleted, and will lock up available P that is supplied as fertiliser until a balance is reached.

Potassium

K is found in adequate quantities in most soils which have a pH within the range needed for growing marijuana. K is held in soils in three forms: unavailable, fixed, and readily available. Most K is held in the unavailable form as part of the minerals feldspar and mica. But a small percentage of the total K in any soil is held in fixed, slightly soluble forms. Some of these can be absorbed and used directly by the plant. The exchangeable K is equal to a fraction of the fixed K. Each soil maintains a balance or ratio of unavailable to fixed and to exchangeable forms. Organic soils have a higher percentage of K in the fixed or available form than mineral soils. As K is used by the plants, some of the unavailable K goes into the more available forms. Plants can use K in both the soluble and the fixed forms.

Most clays and soils that are well-limed have adequate reserves of K. Acidic soils generally have low K reserves. Mucks, silts, and peats have low reserves of K, and have little capacity to hold it chemically when it is applied. Sands have K reserves, but little capacity to convert it to a fixed or available form. Most western soils have adequate reserves or K. The exchangeable K in soils becomes fixed if the soil dries out; so the available K of a recently dried soil is usually low.

K is tested in its elementary state, but when described as a nutrient, it is given as potash (K2O). The formulas for converting are K * 1.2 + (K2O),(K2O) divided by 1.2 + K. Soils with 180 lbs or more of available potash per acre (4 lbs per 1,000 sp.ft.) have an adequate supply. The total reserve K should test no lower than 900 lbs per acre (21 lbs per 1,000 sq. ft.).

The Secondary Nutrients

Magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), and sulfur (S) are usually found in adequate quantities in soils suitable for growing marijuana. However, some New England soils do have Mg deficiencies. Soils which have a neutral or near-neutral pH almost always have adequate Ca and sulfur levels.

Magnesium deficiencies are corrected by adding 50 to 100 lbs of Mg per acre (2.25 lbs per 1,000 sq.ft.). The most inexpensive way to add Mg is to use a dolomitic limestone for adjusting soil pH. Dolomitic limestone is about 12 percent Mg (see Table 21); so 800 lbs of it are needed to supply 100 lbs of Mg. Dolomitic limestone releases Mg to the soil gradually. For faster action, epsom salts (magnesium sulfate, MgSO4) can be used. Five hundred lbs of epsom salts are required to supply soil with 100 lbs of Mg. Mg deficiencies can also be corrected by using foliar sprays. Dissolve one ounce of epsom salts in a gallon of water and spray all foliage.
{Picture The relationship between soil pH and relative plant nutrient availability. The wider the bar, the more the availability. This chart is for soil types recommended in this book.. {Nitrogen - pH of 6.3 to 8 Phosphorus - 6.5 to 7.5 Potassium - 6.5 to 9 Sulfur - 6 to 9 Calcium - 6.7 to 8.5 Magnesium - 6.5 to 8.5 Iron - <4 to 6 Manganese - 4.7 to 6.5 Boron - 5 to 7 or 9 Copper and Zinc - 5 to 7 Molybdenum - 7}}

Micronutrients

Micronutrients are used by plants in minute quantities, and most soils contain enough of them to meet plant requirements. Home gardeners and guerilla farmers seldom encounter any micronutrient deficiencies. But heavily cropped lands sometimes develop a deficiency of one or more micronutrients because of crop depletion. Micronutrients are made available to the plants only if there is a delicate balance in the soil chemistry, and it is easy to create toxic conditions by adding them to soil when they are not needed. For that reason, soils should be treated with micronutrients only when symptoms occur or when the deficiency is known by analysis or past experience. Only small quantities of additives are required for treatment. Manures, composts, other organic fertilisers, lime, rock powders, and ash contain large quantities of trace elements. Active organic additives quickly release micronutrients in a form that is available to the plants.

Boron

Boron deficiencies in marijuana occur in acid soils as a result of depletion by heaving cropping. The areas most affected by it are vegetable fields in the mid-Atlantic states, alfalfa and clover fields east of the Mississippi, and truck farms and orchards in the Northwest. Boron is found in phosphate fertilisers, gypsum, and lime, and is the main ingredient of boric acid and borax. When borax or boric acid are used, they are applied at the rate 10 to 20 lbs per acre. They are used as a foliar spray at the rate of 1 ounce per gallon of water.

Chlorine

Chlorine deficiency does not normally occur. Some chemical fertilisers contain chlorine, and toxic conditions occur infrequently. Toxic chlorine conditions are eliminated by leaching.

Copper

Copper deficiencies occur infrequently in truck farms in Florida, California, and the Great Lakes region. Wood shavings and tobacco contain large amounts of copper. A foliar spray composed of 1 ounce each of calcium hydroxide and copper sulfate (a fungicide) per gallon of water is used by commercial vegetable growers.

Iron

Iron deficiencies occur in orchards west of the Mississippi and in Florida, and in alkaline soils in which iron is largely insoluble. Lowering soil pH often solves the problem. Chelated iron, which is water-soluble, is available at most nurseries and quickly supplies iron even when pH is extreme. Humus and seaweed are excellent sources of iron.

Manganese

Manganese deficiencies occur in the Atlantic states, the Great Lakes area, Utah, and Arizona. Manganese is found in manure, seaweed, and some forest leaf mould (especially hickory and white oak). Manganese deficiencies can be corrected by using a foliar spray of manganese sulfate at the rate of 0.5 to 1.0 oz. per gal. Soil is sometimes treated with manganese sulfate at the rate of 20 to 100 lbs per acre. In neutral or alkaline soils, most of the manganese sulfate becomes fixed and unavailable to the plants by the end of the growing season.

Molybdenum

Molybdenum deficiencies occur primarily along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts and in the Great Lakes region. Plants need extremely small amounts of molybdenum, less than 1 PPM in leaf and stem tissue. Molybdenum deficiencies occur when the soil is too acidic. By raising the pH level, one can make molybdenum available.

Zinc

Zinc deficiencies occur in soils throughout the U.S., primarily because of heavy cropping. It is most likely to occur in acid-leached sandy soils, and in neutral and alkaline soils where it is insoluble. In soils with high amounts of available P, zinc is also unavailable. Many deciduous tree leaves and twigs, composts, slag, and rock phosphate contain large amounts of zinc. Zinc sulfate is used as foliar spray at the rate of 3 oz. of zinc sulfate per gallon of water, or as a soil treatment at the rate of 100 lbs per acre. Some orchard growers drive galvanised nails into the trees to provide zinc.
 
Hey great post, very interesting! Just wondering though how much iron sulphate to use? I have a ph of 7.5-8, they are 12 days old in 9l pots, any help would be greatly appreciated!
 
I have a strange circumstance ...
rain water is testing at 8 and tap water at 6.5
bought a soil tester and most of my pots are 7.5-8 , will that come down if i continue to use the slightly acid tap water ? or
will i need to add an adjuster ?? thanks ... garce
 
Rain water at 8? That seems extreme. Usually it is 5.6. Either it is picking up some high levels of something alkaline in the atmosphere, or maybe being collected in a container or running off of a roofing material which is causing this? Check the tester though.
I think the answer to your question is yes, sort of. People do adjust high or low to compensate for the soil ph. I would try to get the soil base to something closer to 7 if possible. But I can't give a more educated answer than the info above.
 
thanks .. the rainwater i tested was roof runoff , did not consider that might add something..
i'll try again with a rain that falls in a bucket .. i use the same water on all plants and get a soil range from just over 6 to 8 ,
gotta just keep trying to eliminate sources and get the balances correct
 
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