View Full Version : Green soil?????
in_grind_we_toke
02-27-2013, 07:32 PM
Started growing for the first time ever. I mixed in organic blood meal into the soil and followed measurement directions. End of week one after seeds sprouted I noticed the soil started turning green (Moving towards end of week 3). Did the blood meal turn the soil green or is there a problem?? Help!?!? See picture
painretreat
02-27-2013, 07:33 PM
What kind of soil, did you use? What are all the things you put in it?
in_grind_we_toke
02-27-2013, 07:45 PM
Arizona soil. I got it from an organic nursery. (I use this for my veggie garden for years. I like it better than potting soil) So I was thinking that maybe it would work for this. And I also got the organic blood meal from them as well, but I never tried it on anything but this. So all I did was mix a pinch of blood meal and mixed it with the soil, and purified water for watering.
Mal420xl
02-27-2013, 08:12 PM
looks too dense, too wet. that looks like mold or algea.
in_grind_we_toke
02-27-2013, 10:25 PM
So what should I do? try to break up the soil or transplant it to different soil?
Mal420xl
02-27-2013, 10:50 PM
i guess you can use the same stuff try mixing some perlite into it and replant it that should help some. the plants look healthy enough that soil just looks like lunchroom meatloaf. dont water them so much unless they are drying out that fast.
DemoMaas
02-27-2013, 11:36 PM
when you zoom in it really looks like algea.
in_grind_we_toke
02-28-2013, 05:20 PM
Thank you everyone. Ill try the perlite. Yah the soil dries up fast. I water them about an ounce a day and the next morning they are completely dry. So I wonder why it would be algea if its not sitting in water?
Mal420xl
03-01-2013, 03:03 AM
well it could also be something leaching to the surface. i read somewhere about bloodmeal doing something like that. are they inside? i know how dry it is there, you may want to try a humidifier to see if you can keep them from drying so fast. the perlite should help it hold water too. is that soil from sedona? got a lot of red to it.
pushit
03-01-2013, 03:34 AM
well it could also be something leaching to the surface. i read somewhere about bloodmeal doing something like that. are they inside? i know how dry it is there, you may want to try a humidifier to see if you can keep them from drying so fast. the perlite should help it hold water too. is that soil from sedona? got a lot of red to it.
Great info Mal. I just want to add that perlite is used for drainage instead of retaining. For retaining water, vermiculite is what you will want to use.
kest30
03-02-2013, 03:59 AM
Hey! I'm in AZ also, it's fully algae holmes. Gotta block the light! I have the same problem, especially with rock wool.
Cover dem pots with a piece of heavy paper like a cut out from a paper bag that breathes well. I cut out a circle that is an inch or so larger in diameter than the pot. Then, I cut to the center and slide the paper around the stem. Once your plant has a large enough canopy to block the light itself you can remove the cover.
I used to top soil with hydroton to prevent algae and avoid having to till the soil but now I'm too cheap! lol
Don't sweat the algae, cannabis grows too fast to really be affected but it does block oxygen from the roots, so take action bruddah! (Or sister, I guess)
in_grind_we_toke
03-05-2013, 02:41 AM
well it could also be something leaching to the surface. i read somewhere about bloodmeal doing something like that. are they inside? i know how dry it is there, you may want to try a humidifier to see if you can keep them from drying so fast. the perlite should help it hold water too. is that soil from sedona? got a lot of red to it.
Yeah it's from Sedona.
in_grind_we_toke
03-05-2013, 02:42 AM
Hey! I'm in AZ also, it's fully algae holmes. Gotta block the light! I have the same problem, especially with rock wool.
Cover dem pots with a piece of heavy paper like a cut out from a paper bag that breathes well. I cut out a circle that is an inch or so larger in diameter than the pot. Then, I cut to the center and slide the paper around the stem. Once your plant has a large enough canopy to block the light itself you can remove the cover.
I used to top soil with hydroton to prevent algae and avoid having to till the soil but now I'm too cheap! lol
Don't sweat the algae, cannabis grows too fast to really be affected but it does block oxygen from the roots, so take action bruddah! (Or sister, I guess)
Lol Yeah, sista.
Thanks for the advice. I'll try that!
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.