Growing Without Bloom Nutes By Farside05

All I can think of is Ron Burgundy.

Yep, we're done here. :laugh:


Maybe we could say one trace mineral is like chocolate, another like a peanut, another coffee nut. They all get the amino acid candy shell. Analogy still works perfectly since there are multiple metal trace minerals that are chelated.

Well, I'm glad you didn't use a snickers reference then. I'd be in a world of hurt. :rofl:



Now I'm hungry, and thirsty.

Guess that means... Guiness? :rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
I liked the M&M analogy, it was the best explanation of chelation I've come across and I read my fair share.
 
I liked the M&M analogy, it was the best explanation of chelation I've come across and I read my fair share.


It was very nice, yes indeed. :D

It's kind of like how I "chelated" some bailey's with coffee a few minutes ago. :laugh:
 
I liked the M&M analogy, it was the best explanation of chelation I've come across and I read my fair share.

I can't say it's totally mine. The candy shell on a M&M was used in one of my references, but just kinda in passing. I just fleshed it out a little more.
 
I'd like to add to the topic that the reason chelators such as EDTA, EDDTA and DTPA are used in bottled nutes is because amino chelates in concentrates would quickly break down. These acids are toxic to plants at high concentrations, but can safely be absorbed at trace levels. If memory serves me well, I vaguely recall that amino chelators are better and more preferred though due to the acid being used to synthesize enzymes after the metallic ion is released, so it's dual purposed. But when making liquid concentrates, the synthetics are needed to keep the metallics from oxidizing b/c otherwise they fall out of suspension.
 
I'd like to add to the topic that the reason chelators such as EDTA, EDDTA and DTPA are used in bottled nutes is because amino chelates in concentrates would quickly break down. These acids are toxic to plants at high concentrations, but can safely be absorbed at trace levels. If memory serves me well, I vaguely recall that amino chelators are better and more preferred though due to the acid being used to synthesize enzymes after the metallic ion is released, so it's dual purposed. But when making liquid concentrates, the synthetics are needed to keep the metallics from oxidizing b/c otherwise they fall out of suspension.

I can't confirm or deny. Haven't went down that rabbit hole yet, but it would stand to reason. The other Amino chelated fertilizers I've encountered have been dry and primarily used for field crops. Its easier for a farmer to distribute a granular. They also aren't going to pay for diluted liquid for hundreds and thousands of acres. You'd have to have semi tankers traveling the country full of the stuff. The cost would be astronomical.
 
As more and more people make the switch to Mega Crop I’m seeing a lot of misconceptions of what it is, or is not. Let’s examine further. To keep the high-brow scientific speak to a minimum, we’ll keep it simplified and in basic terms.

First let’s review some basics. The word “Salt or Salts” is thrown around often and it’s grossly misused. For the full article on Salts, see HERE in my journal. Otherwise, let us summarize. The general public thinks of Salt as the white granular stuff season your food with, NaCl, which is toxic to plants. This is NOT what we are talking about here. We are using the chemist view of Salts which is, “any molecule that is made up of two or more ions.” They are normally crystalline solids. There are hundreds of different kinds of Salts, some like Ammonium Nitrate and Potassium Chloride are common in fertilizer. When salts are dissolved in water, the ions in the salt separate and are no longer joined together. They are now properly called ions, not salt.

To recap, if you are using a DRY fertilizer that contains things like Potassium Nitrate (combination of Potassium and Nitrogen ions), Calcium Nitrate (Calcium and Nitrogen ions), and Magnesium Sulfate (Magnesium and Sulfur ions), these ARE Salts. Once you add that powder to a gallon or liter of water and dissolve it, it is no longer Salts its IONS. So guess what. Mega Crop IS a Salt based fertilizer. Is that bad? NOT AT ALL! In organic gardening, you may have substance that is consumed by a microorganism and it excretes a Nitrogen ion as a byproduct. That Nitrogen ion is NO DIFFERENT than the Nitrogen ion that is released when some Potassium Nitrate was dissolved in water. AN ION IS AN ION, THE PLANT KNOWS NO DIFFERENCE.

What about Salt build up? If you are this point and you’re asking this question, reread the previous two paragraphs. The moment you dissolved that solid into water it became ions, not salts. The question should be, What about a buildup or imbalance of unused ions? It may be nitpicky, but let’s use the correct vernacular. It could be that you supplied more of a particular ion than what the plant needed. Let’s pick one for examples sake. Let’s say that you provided more Phosphorus than the plat needed. That excess Phosphorous will build up in the growing medium over time and could cause issues. This is why it’s recommended that you water until there is a good runoff or periodically rinse your medium, to reset the balance of your intended feed.

Enough about Salts, let’s talk about Chelation. What is it and why is it necessary? In really simplified form, the metal trace elements needed for our plants tend to react poorly with growing mediums that are a pH level of 6.5 and above. Instead of being readily available to our plants, they bind with the medium instead. Think of a Chelated trace elementa as an M&M. Say the plant wants chocolate, but when you try to give it chocolate, it melts all over your hands, and not in the plants mouth. The solution? Let’s put a hard candy shell on the chocolate and turn it into an M&M. The plant consumes the M&M, getting the chocolate it craves from inside the hard candy shell, and you don’t get chocolate all over your hands. Chelation works much the same. The barrier that the trace element has been chelated with keeps it from sticking to the soil so the plant can uptake it though the roots or leaves.

Now that we know what Chelation is, what types are there? Traditionally EDTA has been used to Chelate the metal trace elements in fertilizers. It does its job quite well. The other type is Chelation with Amino Acids. Is this something new? No. Although you can find studies dating back to 2006 on Amino Acid Chelation, you haven’t really seen many products adopting it until 2015. So what is the difference? EDTA is a synthetic, non-biodegradable, product. It is considered a pollutant and can build up in animal and human tissue. Amino Acids are organic and biodegradable. They are not considered a pollutant to the environment and are more sustainable. In the 2006 study mentioned above, using rice crops as a test subject, the Amino Acid Chelated fertilizer produced 10% more yield. Amino Acid Chelation is more efficient than EDTA and supplies that plant with more of the trace minerals. Which type of Chelation does Mega Crop use? Amino Acid, whereas many of the other fertilizers are still using EDTA.

The low down on Chelation. It’s not a dirty word. You want your fertilizer Chelated. You want your trace minerals available over a wide pH range and available to your plant. The only valid argument against Chelation is that it was Chelated with EDTA and that it is a pollutant, non-biodegradable, and can build up in human tissue. Problem solved with Amino Acid Chelation.

So there are the meat and potatoes of Mega Crop, but it doesn’t end there. In your bag they also decided to throw in a side salad. Mega Crop also includes other amino acids, kelp extract, B vitamins, and a small amount of Silica. These are some things that growers have been supplementing their plants with, so they decided to add them to the mix. The benefit to you is that you now don’t have to have a bunch of extra supplements. Everything you need to grow a nice plant is included in the bag. Can you decide to supplement other things with Mega Crop? Yes. It’s up to you to make that decision, but it isn’t necessary. If you do, however, use caution, especially with high K boosters. Mega Crop has quite robust in K to begin with. Too much and you could lock out other things like Calcium.

Summary

What it is. Mega Crop is a complete powdered 1 part fertilizer. Being a dry fertilizer, you’re not paying for water which you could add yourself. You’re not paying for the shipping cost and weight of that water either. Plus you are getting a full strength product, not a watered down, diluted version. It contains all 17 required elements for plant growth. Many of the other products, both dry and liquid, will only contain the 8 essentials. On top of that it also contains some additives that many growers choose to supplement, cutting down your supplement cost. Since its one part, you also aren’t spending needless time mixing several bottles. It’s quick and easy.

What it is not. Mega Crop isn’t unicorn horn dust. It works just like any other fertilizer. Other fertilizers are Chelated too and allow for the uptake of required elements over a broad pH range, most just do so with EDTA instead of amino acids. It’s not “Salt Free”. The sources of N-P-K are the same “Salts” that other fertilizer companies are using. Look at a label where it says “derived from” (see photos of Mega Crop and Dyna Gro Foliage Pro below). There is no guarantee that unused ions will not build up in your growing medium. It is still recommended to feed to runoff, or occasionally rinse your medium, to maintain the optimum balance of all the nutrients. You can check this yourself quite easily. If you don’t water to the point of runoff for several feedings, do so once and catch that first bit and check it with your TDS meter. What I can guarantee is that it will be higher, probably significantly higher, than your input. Pour another gallon or so at your pot and check the runoff again. You will see a decline. So why was that initial runoff so much higher? Build up! It’s not a knock on Mega Crop at all. It’s just fertilizer basics 101. You will not be able to feed every element in exactly the amount the plant wants. The goal is to make sure there is an abundance, but not overly excessive amount, of everything it might want. It will pick and choose from the buffet from there. It won’t eat the whole buffet. There will be leftovers. Those leftovers will remain in your medium. They aren’t sucked in by the roots, travel up the stems, and transpired out the leaves. Your plant isn’t Bulimic.

I’m sure someone with a PhD in Botany will want to say I over simplified something or mince points. Please provide supporting documentation. I could have linked every article for reference material but chose to try to put things in everyday language and examples the average stoner can understand, since that's what most of us are.



Oh man i was actually able 2 follow along on that one :laugh: :rofl:. I think ill jus get the stuff to make my own silica and cal-mag an jus drop the sweetcandy see if things dnt change 4 the better lol.

I'm a big fan of Bulleit Rye.
:drool:

But never turn down Woodford or Dickel.
:thumb:

Oh dude every time i talk about the bulleit no1 knows what im talkn about but what u like better the orange or green lable?
 
Excellent write-up farside! Bookmarked for linkability,

You should post that in the MegaCrop thread and drop the mic.

Link away. I knight thee Sir Links A Lot, Lord of the Multi Quote :rofl:
 
Oh man i was actually able 2 follow along on that one :laugh: :rofl:. I think ill jus get the stuff to make my own silica and cal-mag an jus drop the sweetcandy see if things dnt change 4 the better lol.

Oh dude every time i talk about the bulleit no1 knows what im talkn about but what u like better the orange or green lable?

Great, part of the mission accomplished. I wanted to make it easily understandable. I'd like to think my nute regiment is just as simple, although nothing is as simple as Mega Crop alone, especially in a medium that has buffering capability.

I've never had Bulleit. I drank a shit ton of Bourbon for years, mainly Evan Williams. To me, most Bourbons taste very similar, which is why I drank the cheaper stuff. Unless you want to talk Blanton's. That stuff is like the Single Malt Scotch of Bourbons, and priced like it too. I said at the time "If I had to choose one alcohol for the rest of life, it would be Bourbon". It's very versatile. I burnt myself out on it a bit, and also my acid reflux doesn't like it that much anymore. I find I have less heartburn with rum, which is why I drink the shit out of it now...lol
 
Oh man i was actually able 2 follow along on that one :laugh: :rofl:. I think ill jus get the stuff to make my own silica and cal-mag an jus drop the sweetcandy see if things dnt change 4 the better lol.



Oh dude every time i talk about the bulleit no1 knows what im talkn about but what u like better the orange or green lable?
Green Label is my fave, but I like the other a bunch too.
:thumb:
 
Great, part of the mission accomplished. I wanted to make it easily understandable. I'd like to think my nute regiment is just as simple, although nothing is as simple as Mega Crop alone, especially in a medium that has buffering capability.

I've never had Bulleit. I drank a shit ton of Bourbon for years, mainly Evan Williams. To me, most Bourbons taste very similar, which is why I drank the cheaper stuff. Unless you want to talk Blanton's. That stuff is like the Single Malt Scotch of Bourbons, and priced like it too. I said at the time "If I had to choose one alcohol for the rest of life, it would be Bourbon". It's very versatile. I burnt myself out on it a bit, and also my acid reflux doesn't like it that much anymore. I find I have less heartburn with rum, which is why I drink the shit out of it now...lol

Yea i used to drink alot wen i was younger in my teens n early 20s. But i have ulcers so bad in my stomach that they almost ate a hole threw my stomach lining. So now cant really drink much any more but if i do have a few drinks i gotta make sure i have food in my stomach lol.

Green Label is my fave, but I like the other a bunch too.
:thumb:

Yea thats the one i like too. Wen i actually do drink thats what i look for but almost no bar has it. Except this one bar called the whiskey barrel they get every kind of whisky and whiskey and bourbon u could want. Well almost every kind im sure there are a few out there i never even heard of :hmmmm: :laugh:.
 
As more and more people make the switch to Mega Crop I’m seeing a lot of misconceptions of what it is, or is not. Let’s examine further. To keep the high-brow scientific speak to a minimum, we’ll keep it simplified and in basic terms.

First let’s review some basics. The word “Salt or Salts” is thrown around often and it’s grossly misused. For the full article on Salts, see HERE in my journal. Otherwise, let us summarize. The general public thinks of Salt as the white granular stuff season your food with, NaCl, which is toxic to plants. This is NOT what we are talking about here. We are using the chemist view of Salts which is, “any molecule that is made up of two or more ions.” They are normally crystalline solids. There are hundreds of different kinds of Salts, some like Ammonium Nitrate and Potassium Chloride are common in fertilizer. When salts are dissolved in water, the ions in the salt separate and are no longer joined together. They are now properly called ions, not salt.

To recap, if you are using a DRY fertilizer that contains things like Potassium Nitrate (combination of Potassium and Nitrogen ions), Calcium Nitrate (Calcium and Nitrogen ions), and Magnesium Sulfate (Magnesium and Sulfur ions), these ARE Salts. Once you add that powder to a gallon or liter of water and dissolve it, it is no longer Salts its IONS. So guess what. Mega Crop IS a Salt based fertilizer. Is that bad? NOT AT ALL! In organic gardening, you may have substance that is consumed by a microorganism and it excretes a Nitrogen ion as a byproduct. That Nitrogen ion is NO DIFFERENT than the Nitrogen ion that is released when some Potassium Nitrate was dissolved in water. AN ION IS AN ION, THE PLANT KNOWS NO DIFFERENCE.

What about Salt build up? If you are this point and you’re asking this question, reread the previous two paragraphs. The moment you dissolved that solid into water it became ions, not salts. The question should be, What about a buildup or imbalance of unused ions? It may be nitpicky, but let’s use the correct vernacular. It could be that you supplied more of a particular ion than what the plant needed. Let’s pick one for examples sake. Let’s say that you provided more Phosphorus than the plat needed. That excess Phosphorous will build up in the growing medium over time and could cause issues. This is why it’s recommended that you water until there is a good runoff or periodically rinse your medium, to reset the balance of your intended feed.

Enough about Salts, let’s talk about Chelation. What is it and why is it necessary? In really simplified form, the metal trace elements needed for our plants tend to react poorly with growing mediums that are a pH level of 6.5 and above. Instead of being readily available to our plants, they bind with the medium instead. Think of a Chelated trace elementa as an M&M. Say the plant wants chocolate, but when you try to give it chocolate, it melts all over your hands, and not in the plants mouth. The solution? Let’s put a hard candy shell on the chocolate and turn it into an M&M. The plant consumes the M&M, getting the chocolate it craves from inside the hard candy shell, and you don’t get chocolate all over your hands. Chelation works much the same. The barrier that the trace element has been chelated with keeps it from sticking to the soil so the plant can uptake it though the roots or leaves.

Now that we know what Chelation is, what types are there? Traditionally EDTA has been used to Chelate the metal trace elements in fertilizers. It does its job quite well. The other type is Chelation with Amino Acids. Is this something new? No. Although you can find studies dating back to 2006 on Amino Acid Chelation, you haven’t really seen many products adopting it until 2015. So what is the difference? EDTA is a synthetic, non-biodegradable, product. It is considered a pollutant and can build up in animal and human tissue. Amino Acids are organic and biodegradable. They are not considered a pollutant to the environment and are more sustainable. In the 2006 study mentioned above, using rice crops as a test subject, the Amino Acid Chelated fertilizer produced 10% more yield. Amino Acid Chelation is more efficient than EDTA and supplies that plant with more of the trace minerals. Which type of Chelation does Mega Crop use? Amino Acid, whereas many of the other fertilizers are still using EDTA.

The low down on Chelation. It’s not a dirty word. You want your fertilizer Chelated. You want your trace minerals available over a wide pH range and available to your plant. The only valid argument against Chelation is that it was Chelated with EDTA and that it is a pollutant, non-biodegradable, and can build up in human tissue. Problem solved with Amino Acid Chelation.

So there are the meat and potatoes of Mega Crop, but it doesn’t end there. In your bag they also decided to throw in a side salad. Mega Crop also includes other amino acids, kelp extract, B vitamins, and a small amount of Silica. These are some things that growers have been supplementing their plants with, so they decided to add them to the mix. The benefit to you is that you now don’t have to have a bunch of extra supplements. Everything you need to grow a nice plant is included in the bag. Can you decide to supplement other things with Mega Crop? Yes. It’s up to you to make that decision, but it isn’t necessary. If you do, however, use caution, especially with high K boosters. Mega Crop has quite robust in K to begin with. Too much and you could lock out other things like Calcium.

Summary

What it is. Mega Crop is a complete powdered 1 part fertilizer. Being a dry fertilizer, you’re not paying for water which you could add yourself. You’re not paying for the shipping cost and weight of that water either. Plus you are getting a full strength product, not a watered down, diluted version. It contains all 17 required elements for plant growth. Many of the other products, both dry and liquid, will only contain the 8 essentials. On top of that it also contains some additives that many growers choose to supplement, cutting down your supplement cost. Since its one part, you also aren’t spending needless time mixing several bottles. It’s quick and easy.

What it is not. Mega Crop isn’t unicorn horn dust. It works just like any other fertilizer. Other fertilizers are Chelated too and allow for the uptake of required elements over a broad pH range, most just do so with EDTA instead of amino acids. It’s not “Salt Free”. The sources of N-P-K are the same “Salts” that other fertilizer companies are using. Look at a label where it says “derived from” (see photos of Mega Crop and Dyna Gro Foliage Pro below). There is no guarantee that unused ions will not build up in your growing medium. It is still recommended to feed to runoff, or occasionally rinse your medium, to maintain the optimum balance of all the nutrients. You can check this yourself quite easily. If you don’t water to the point of runoff for several feedings, do so once and catch that first bit and check it with your TDS meter. What I can guarantee is that it will be higher, probably significantly higher, than your input. Pour another gallon or so at your pot and check the runoff again. You will see a decline. So why was that initial runoff so much higher? Build up! It’s not a knock on Mega Crop at all. It’s just fertilizer basics 101. You will not be able to feed every element in exactly the amount the plant wants. The goal is to make sure there is an abundance, but not overly excessive amount, of everything it might want. It will pick and choose from the buffet from there. It won’t eat the whole buffet. There will be leftovers. Those leftovers will remain in your medium. They aren’t sucked in by the roots, travel up the stems, and transpired out the leaves. Your plant isn’t Bulimic.

I’m sure someone with a PhD in Botany will want to say I over simplified something or mince points. Please provide supporting documentation. I could have linked every article for reference material but chose to try to put things in everyday language and examples the average stoner can understand, since that's what most of us are.


love it farside. nice work mate. thank you.
 
Day 49, Day 14 from Flip

Been up 25 hours when I visited the girls. Probably should have fed the big girl (back left) in the AM but got into replacing the drive axles in the wife's van. She looks a bit wilty but will snap back after being fed 1 gal of 6g Mega Crop, 5ml Cal Mag, 5ml Pro Tekt, 10ml Terpinator. She could take more liquid but i'll catch that when the other girls need a drink. Speaking of drinks, I've been on a diet of Cherry Rum and Diet Coke plus Tequila shots. Wanted to thin out the ladies, so out came the scissors (aka Farside Drunken Hands). I normally wait for the stretch to finish before I take too much off them, but these are leafy bitches. Undercarriage removed and the inside fans thinned for better light penetration. When I go full defoliation mode, I don't care if anything actually ends up in the garbage bag, I'll clean that up when I'm done. I think they came out pretty good. They may look a bit yellow because I exposed so much new growth. That will change in a day or two as they embrace the new light.






 
Well lookie thar at all them budsites!

For all the wacking, I only mistakenly cut one secondary top off. I'm lucky to do that well sober, so I consider it a win. Hour 26, still going.
 
Hi @farside05,
What feed schedule would you rec using MC with Pro-Tekt and Cal Mag for cuttings?
btw awesome on the fauxtekt. I was just thinking how fast my little bottle is already going down.
 
Hi @farside05,
What feed schedule would you rec using MC with Pro-Tekt and Cal Mag for cuttings?
btw awesome on the fauxtekt. I was just thinking how fast my little bottle is already going down.

I've yet to do anything with cuttings/clones 1) because I've done more autos than photos, and 2) because I've always wanted to try new strains. Only until the last grow have I found anything I've wanted a continuous supply of and I didn't take cuttings. That said, I'd do 1g Mega, 1ml Cal-Mag, and 1mg Pro-Tekt. I'll sprout seeds in that so it should not be too strong. I'd do that for 5-7 days after roots start showing and then move to 2 each. That would simulate my feed schedule when growing from seed.
 
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