When to fertilize after deflask

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DKkenn

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As the title says, when would you recommend starting to fertilize compots?
I guess starting with half dose or less?

I was half planning to give up orchids but my wifes colleague gave me a flask of paph kolopangii. And then i bought some from Martin here..
hence it was a short break.. šŸ„³
 
As the title says, when would you recommend starting to fertilize compots?
I guess starting with half dose or less?

I was half planning to give up orchids but my wifes colleague gave me a flask of paph kolopangii. And then i bought some from Martin here..
hence it was a short break.. šŸ„³
Not sure why you would stop... They are getting fertilizer in flask. I don't ever use a lot of fertilizer all at once, pretty much constant low amount every time I water.
 
I agree with Rob.

You also need to banish concepts like ā€œhalf doseā€ as that is meaningless. Just as caloric intake is a way to measure and control your food, ppm N is the way to do it for plants.

75-125 ppm N, applied weekly, seems to be a pretty reasonable rate for most plants grown in media that remains moist. Donā€™t let the fact that itā€™s a concentration, not a mass, bother you. We really have no meaningful idea of the true mass uptake of the plants, since the roots donā€™t come into contact with 100% of the solution, but that level has proven to be reasonable.

You can certainly weigh the fertilizer out to make such a solution, but a reasonable approximation is to divide 9.2 by the %N in the formula, as it gives the ml/L for the middle of that range.
 
Not sure why you would stop... They are getting fertilizer in flask. I don't ever use a lot of fertilizer all at once, pretty much constant low amount every time I water.
I have limited space and wanted to try other plants.
75-125 ppm N, applied weekly, seems to be a pretty reasonable rate for most plants grown in media that remains moist. Donā€™t let the fact that itā€™s a concentration, not a mass, bother you. We really have no meaningful idea of the true mass uptake of the plants, since the roots donā€™t come into contact with 100% of the solution, but that level has proven to be reasonable.

You can certainly weigh the fertilizer out to make such a solution, but a reasonable approximation is to divide 9.2 by the %N in the formula, as it gives the ml/L for the middle of that range.

Thank you. I will try that.
Sorry for the late reply. Life got in the way.
 
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