"Indoor Marijuana Grow HOW-TO -- 'how-to-grow-cannabis.info' -- Soil Science: Types of Fertilizers, Organic Soil Chemistry for Growing Cannabis Seeds Through Bud Fruition."

Cannabis Soil Chemistry


Soil Formulas for Healthy Organic Cannabis Buds

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Lighting Indoor Cannabis

Light Movers for Bud Growth

Cannabis Soil Chemistry

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How Long to Vegetate Marijuana

High THC Content and Bud Density

Harvesting and Curing Weed

Insect Pests and Fungus Control

There is an old organic gardening adage - “Feed the soil not the plant.” It is very true- it’s actually the critters in “live soil” that break down organic fertilizers and “feed” it to our cannabis plants.


A great organic soil formula for cannabis is easy to assemble:

40% composted topsoil
30% worm castings
20% perlite
10% dolomite(lime), guanos, goodies, etc.

If you want extra aeration and nutrient holding capacity from your soil -- 10% coco peat/30% composted topsoil with the other ingredients PH balanced between 6.5 to 7.0 should do the trick. The amount of bat guanos and manure should be balanced out to NPK of around 15/15/15 for veg. During budding or flowering stage, adding a guano with an NPK of 1/15/1 allow for larger blooms to grow.

What happens when you add a little inorganic fertilizer to the soil?

"When small quantities of inorganic salts, such as the soluble mineral matter of soil and commercial fertilizers, are added to water they dissociate into electrically charged units called ions. The positively charged ions (cations) such as hydrogen (H+), potassium (K+), calcium (Ca++) magnesium (Mg++), ammonium (NH4+), iron (Fe++), manganese (Mn++), and zinc (Zn++) are absorbed mostly on the negatively charged surfaces of the soil colloids (microscopic clay and humus particles) and exist only in small quantities in the soil solution. Thus, the humus-clay colloids serve as a storehouse for certain essential ions (cations). The negatively charged ions (anions), such as nitrates (N03-) phosphates (HPO4--), sulfates (SO4--), and chlorides (Cl-), are found almost exclusively in the soil solution and can therefore be leached away easily with overwatering. The roots and root hairs are in intimate contact with the soil colloidal surfaces, which are bathed in the soil solution, and therefore nutrient uptake can take place either from the soil solution or directly from the colloidal surfaces (cation exchange). The soil solution is the most important source of nutrients, but since it is very dilute its nutrients are easily depleted and must be replenished from soil particles. The solid phase of the soil, acting as a reservoir of nutrients, slowly releases them into the soil solution by the solubilization of soil minerals and organics, by the solution of soluble salts, and by cation exchange.

A more dramatic increase in the nutrient content of the soil solution takes place with the addition of commercial fertilizers. As plants absorb nutrients (ions) they exchange them for other ions. For example, for the uptake of one potassium (K+) ion or one ammonium (NH4+) ion, one hydrogen (H+) ion is released into the soil solution or directly into the soil colloids by the process of cation exchange. Similarly, for the uptake of one calcium (Ca++) or one magnesium (Mg++) ion, two hydrogen (H+) ions are released by the root. Thus, as the plant absorbs these essential cations, the soil solution and the colloidal particles contain more and more hydrogen (H+) ions, which explains why the removal of cations (ammonium (NH4+) nitrogen is a good example) by crops tends to make soils acidic, i.e., having a low pH. Also, as the plant (absorbs essential anions such as nitrates (NO3-) and phosphates (HPO4-), the soil solution is enriched with more and more hydroxyl groups (OH-) and bicarbonates (HCO3-), which explains why the removal of anions (nitrate (NO3-) nitrogen is a good example) by crops tends to make soils alkaline, i.e., having a high pH."

What other goodies are added to soil to punch up size, taste, and potency of the sticky-icky?

Azimite, alfalfa, (cow, chicken, pig) manures, rock phosphate, kelp meal, cotton meal, fish meal, green sand, blackstrap molasses, gypsum salt. All added in small amounts to the soil can have a cumulative affect in size taste and potency of organically grown marijuana. Do not add fertilizers just before harvesting cannabis plants -- bad or "off" flavors can develop in recently fertilized weed ruining an otherwise potent crop. A week is good. Two weeks is better to allow the critters in the soil to do their thing before harvesting.




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How to Grow Cannabis Indoors - A Step By Step Guide on Growing Marijuana

Grow Cannabis in a Room or Closet in your Home - Basics 101

Cannabis Soil Chemistry

Soil Formulas for Healthy Organic Cannabis Buds

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