+1Geonerd said:Ca-nitrate is 60,000x more soluble in water than the phosphate.
If you're looking for a quick hit, Calcium nitrate, chloride, acetate, and others are the way to go.
If mixing into your soil, Ca phosphate will do the slow release thing, while the nitrate will get flushed out fairly quickly.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table#C
Roguejim said:"Delivery system and reactivity. Calcium phosphate, in our form, is a rock derived from natural bone. The calcium in calcium phosphate is reactive and wants to bond to and tie up salts and acts as a carrying agent of the other trace nutrients into the plant, but enters in as a rock molecule.
Calcium nitrate is a salt, based off a nitrate and is delivered to the plant through nitrogen molecule. Because the calcium in calcium nitrate is bonded to a nitrate, the plant can only accept that form in at a lower ph and ultimately adds water weight which will evaporate off during the drying stage after harvest.
Not to hijack my own topic, but, what are your other plants getting for nutes?smileyguy697 said:Nice to see someone else here mention NFTG. I'm running that line on 12 plants this season just to see how it compares.. So far the plants are twice the size as the others and I'm highly impressed.
I have a friend that used this last season http://theurbanfarm.com/tomatomagic.html...I was using teas and rabbit poo last year with killer results but his pods blew mine out the water for size and blisters. So this time I'm going to compare this vs nfgt.. I know nftg is going to win but this stuff is cheap and highly concentrated.Roguejim said:Not to hijack my own topic, but, what are your other plants getting for nutes?
Roguejim said:I put the above questions to Scott Ostrander, president of Oregon's Only Organics, makers of Nectar For The Gods nutrient line. They sell a liquid calcium phosphate product called Demeter's Destiny. Here is Scott's response:
"Delivery system and reactivity. Calcium phosphate, in our form, is a rock derived from natural bone. The calcium in calcium phosphate is reactive and wants to bond to and tie up salts and acts as a carrying agent of the other trace nutrients into the plant, but enters in as a rock molecule.
Calcium nitrate is a salt, based off a nitrate and is delivered to the plant through nitrogen molecule. Because the calcium in calcium nitrate is bonded to a nitrate, the plant can only accept that form in at a lower ph and ultimately adds water weight which will evaporate off during the drying stage after harvest.
Calcium in calcium phosphate aids in sugar production, and oil production.
Calcium nitrate does not."
Drying stage? I think Scott is referring to another crop.
Hybrid Mode 01 said:
I'm no scientist, but I know enough to be pretty sure that none of that ^ is science. That's one of the most bizarre takes on chemistry and plant physiology I have ever encountered.
queequeg152 said:
ill just say that its people like that that contribute to my organic racism.
queequeg152 said:wtf is nftg
Heckle said:
Bone is rock?