Quote:
Originally Posted by Kilmiquix
I wish I could feed at every watering, but there is no way that I can fertilize at every watering. While I CAN water daily, I have to do so in the dark. (I leave for work before the sun comes up, and I don't get home till the sun has set.) And when I fertilize, I generally mix up about 6 milk gallon containers. There is no way I can do that in the morning before work.
SO, Sunday is fertilizer day. 6 gallons of fertilizer with each gallon containing 1 tbs of epsom. (The epsom is new).
|
As I no longer grow in a greenhouse with a metering system injecting fertilizer into the water, I no longer feed every time I water, either.
For weekly feeding - my current regimen - I apply 75 ppm N fertilizer. Divide 6 by the %N in your fertilizer; the result is the teaspoons/gallon for 75 ppm N.
One tablespoon of Epsom Salts per gallon, applied weekly, is overkill. That much once a month is plenty.
The MSU fertilizer for PURE water has 13.2% N, 8% Ca and 2% Mg. That means that if you're applying 75 ppm N, you're applying 45 ppm Ca and 11 ppm Mg.
FWIW, I just went through some leaf analysis data - no orchids, but a wide range of grasses, grains, fruits, vegetables and trees - and the ratios of N:Ca:Mg averaged 100:49:11, suggesting that the ratio in the MSU formula (100:63:15) is more than adequate. Likewise K-Lite, a derivative of the MSU RO formula, at 100:78:23.
And yes, seeing the solution pour though the pots can be disheartening, but if you calculate the cost-per-gallon, it's not THAT much.