2-Scoops wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2024 6:04 pm
seymore_budz wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2024 3:35 pm
Interesting you're re-buffering your coco. You shouldn't need to do so mate. You can indeed flush it through but, once the Coco has been buffered, it doesn't become unbuffered. The reason being that divalent ions have a stronger bond than monovalent ions due to their higher charge. Once you've run a crop through it, all you really need to do is flush with some half strength base fertiliser to "recondition" the media by removing any residual salts.
I thought buffering process was done with calmag, maybe I'm tripping and it isn`t and i have wrong end of stick altogether, but coco pro+ from Canna has a low ec which is calmag in it and all this becomes depleted by time a grow is done, if or when I've used old coco again without buffering or charging it with calmag the growth rate is sluggish as fck man, but when i buffer it with 2 x 24 hour soaks in fresh batch of calmag each time the growth rates are much better and more like fresh pro+ coco from sack. Maybe its not buffering im doing but just charging it with calmag what with coco hogging it and holding on to it slow release style. But that's all I'm doing charging or buffering it up with fresh calmag and i know calcium is needed for healthy growth rates. Think its a double charger ion ca++ too. ?
I do know if i used Canna coco light in past when shops got no pro+ you have to add your own calmag cus its totally inert if you check run off where as pro+ registers a low ec in run off which is calmag i think or was led to believe, from what i read their coco light you charge it or buffer it yourself as your supposed too with their coco bricks/blocks. I read all about this years n years back so its well vague, but yes what is your thoughts am i just charging it up and not buffering it with calmag ? Cheers mate.
So, that's how it works kind of. Coco has When Coco has been washed and retted, it has no nutritional value but, has cation binding sites that hold onto cations. Coconuts grow near the sea so pick up a lot of sodium. Most pith is washed and retted so it's clean but, those binding sites contain sodium or nothing.
If the Coco is unbuffered then you will have many binding sites with nothing bound or a sodium ion bound. As you feed your plants, if unbuffered, these divalent ions will displace the sodium and any other cations bound to that site. This leads to either too much sodium becoming available and/or no Calcium, Magnesium, Iron, Copper and other microelents.
Once that process is complete, Coco is relatively stable for many years. There's minimal change to the chemistry once buffered so no need for more CalMag.
What I suspect is happening is the chelates within the CalMag are pulling excess salt out of the media and cleaning any build-up that's occurred during the last cycle. No buffering is occurring in regards to cation exchange sites but, I suppose it's also buffering when you remove crap from the media this way. Confusing I know
I'm also referring to these sites as binding sites for a reason. They could also be called cation exchange sites as an exchange can happen forsure but, once a divalent ion has bound to a site, not much will budge it.
PS: ++ = divalent cation. Here's a list of each element and it's valancy