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The soil in the pic looks wet because when I took the pic I had just watered them.
The soil is called gulf green. It has very little perlite in it. And I’ve been having draining issues with one of the other plants
So I bought some perlite and made a mix of 75% soil 25% perlite and replanted my plants in 1 gal pots today.
The upturned leaves have been ongoing for the last few days now Just was not sure if I was on the right path or not.
This is my very first grow I’ve been doing a ton of reading and watching videos But I find from one article/ video there’s some discrepancy’s lol
The soil in the pic looks wet because when I took the pic I had just watered them.
The soil is called gulf green. It has very little perlite in it. And I’ve been having draining issues with one of the other plants
So I bought some perlite and made a mix of 75% soil 25% perlite and replanted my plants in 1 gal pots today.
From USGS:
General guidelines for classification of waters are: 0 to 60 mg/L (milligrams per liter) as calcium carbonate is classified as soft; 61 to 120 mg/L as moderately hard; 121 to 180 mg/L as hard; and more than 180 mg/L as very hard.
By this scale, your water is probably considered hard to very hard, depending on the actual amount of CaCO3. This high alkalinity will cause the pH of your medium to rise to unacceptable levels over time.
If the soil is mostly peat moss, it probably is fluffy. But with your high alkalinity, you might have to flush out accumulated salts once in a while, using RO or distilled water.
It's the "Pour Thru" method, from Cornell Univ. that I was trying to recall. Google is your friend.