180g, two weeks in - update may 23

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ingg
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Post by ingg »

Older leaves are melting - they are acting like balansae leaves. Yeah, some pinholes, then... mush.
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Aaron
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Post by Aaron »

I agree with Jeff that the low gro hygro issue is a K issue. It's not been growing well for me either. I've been dosing just a little, i.e. 0.1-0.2 ppm, of potassium everyday in my soil substrate tank with this plant and it seems to be rebounding. Proceed with caution when dosing the K !
ingg
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Post by ingg »

How are you dosing it Aaron, Seachem stuff or? I'll have to pick something up, unless a dry fert can do it.

I have KNO3 and K2SO4, any suggestions anyone? :)
Last edited by ingg on Wed Mar 05, 2008 12:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Ghazanfar Ghori
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Post by Ghazanfar Ghori »

K2SO4 should do it. Quantity you'll have to figure out. Use the APC fertilator.
Aim for about 5ppm to start with.
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Aaron
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Post by Aaron »

Ghazanfar Ghori wrote:K2SO4 should do it. Quantity you'll have to figure out. Use the APC fertilator.
Aim for about 5ppm to start with.
I would aim lower. At least in my experience, VERY small doses is all it takes. Anything more makes for an algae bloom.

I used Chuck Gadd's calculator to make up a solution with K2SO4. APC's fertilator should work fine too.
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Ghazanfar Ghori
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Post by Ghazanfar Ghori »

Aaron wrote:
Ghazanfar Ghori wrote:K2SO4 should do it. Quantity you'll have to figure out. Use the APC fertilator.
Aim for about 5ppm to start with.
I would aim lower. At least in my experience, VERY small doses is all it takes. Anything more makes for an algae bloom.

I used Chuck Gadd's calculator to make up a solution with K2SO4. APC's fertilator should work fine too.
We're talking K right - not P.
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Aaron
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Post by Aaron »

Ghazanfar Ghori wrote:
Aaron wrote:
Ghazanfar Ghori wrote:K2SO4 should do it. Quantity you'll have to figure out. Use the APC fertilator.
Aim for about 5ppm to start with.
I would aim lower. At least in my experience, VERY small doses is all it takes. Anything more makes for an algae bloom.

I used Chuck Gadd's calculator to make up a solution with K2SO4. APC's fertilator should work fine too.
We're talking K right - not P.
Yup, same animal. Maybe there's already some K in my water source. I suppose it depends. In my case though only a very small amount is needed.
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Post by krisw »

Interesting. I guess I always thought that the conventional wisdom was that dosing more K wouldn't hurt anything, as N and P imbalances were largely the algae triggers. Shows how much I know. ;-)
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Ghazanfar Ghori
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Post by Ghazanfar Ghori »

Hm. When I mix my ferts, I usually use the 10:1:10 NPK ratio. For faster
growth, I keep my N at about 10ppm - easy and quick to test for. Everything
else, since its mixed in at the 10:1:10 ratio - works out well. Then once things
have grown in, I bring my N down to 5ppm and switch to a 20:3:20 ratio to slow
down growth an increase color.
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Post by Aaron »

Ghazanfar Ghori wrote:Hm. When I mix my ferts, I usually use the 10:1:10 NPK ratio. For faster
growth, I keep my N at about 10ppm - easy and quick to test for. Everything
else, since its mixed in at the 10:1:10 ratio - works out well. Then once things
have grown in, I bring my N down to 5ppm and switch to a 20:3:20 ratio to slow
down growth an increase color.
Right. I do something similar in a water column dosing tank. I'm only talking about dosing small amounts of K in a soil tank. There seems to be some in the soil already that most plants can uptake. Dosing only a tiny bit seems to supplement the water column needy plants.

Perhaps it isn't the extra potassium that causes the algae issues. It might be the sulfate part of the equation?
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