Quote:
Originally Posted by Shadeflower
the difference will be that leaves will not grow as big, will flower less and could even become so weak that they die.
<SNIP>
If mine needs adjusting I use ph down solution from my local hydroponic shop and I use it at a strength of 1 drop per liter to adjust by 1 ph, so to get it from a ph of 7 to 6 I add 1 drop. If I accidentally add 2 drops I need to start with a fresh batch as that will lower it too much so you don't need much of it. (working with a 10l bucket is easier as it needs 10 drops)
<SNIP>
To put it into perspective on how important or not important it is in my opinion I have thought about it hypothetically :
If I were to have an orchid sitter look after my plants for a year and I had two choices for their care:
a) the right ph but no fertilizer for a year
b) the right fertilizer but the wrong ph for a year.
I would pick scenario a over scenario b for my orchids every time as in scenario a they will have full access to every nutrient they need but in sceanrio b although they will be getting fertilizer added they won't be able to absorb it well and will suffer more than with a reduced amount of fertilize in scenario a as water contains enugh nutrients to keep an orchid alive but if nutrients are locked out because of a wrong ph then the plant will suffer more.
|
Nutrients being “locked out” or the plant’s inability to take them up is the fallacy of the argument.
Unless the pH is extremely high or extremely low, the nutrient ions in solution stay in the intended form and do not precipitate, so are available to be absorbed by the plant.
It may be that this orchid-growing lore originated with a published study from decades ago, but ignores the fact that it was an experiment using a single fertilizer formula being used on a single sample of soil, where such “trapping” is a real and significant phenomenon.
The fact that it is pour-through results from a soil substrate really confounds its value to orchid growers, as soils can have significant cation exchange capacities (CEC), while most orchid media have orders-of-magnitude less, if at all.
The cation exchange capacity is a measure of how well soil components hold onto positively-charged ions – cations – and much of the CEC occurs at the edges of clay particles. The development of positive and negative charges on a clay particle is affected strongly by pH, so we can understand how, at extreme pH values, the charges may strongly bind the cations in fertilizer solutions, making them unavailable to the plants. In orchid media, which tend to have essentially no CEC, the nutrient cations tend to stay in solution and remain available.
Yes, pH
can affect the plants’ uptake dynamics, but again, unless the pH is
way out of bounds, the effect is minimal.