On notes.

I prefere old fashioned paper notebook and a pencil. I never use a pen for lab journals. You have your lab notes with you at the bench. Water ruins ink, but not the carbon from a pencil.

Of you like to keen your journal electronically I can recommend two apps for iOS:

Dairo

Gardening Companion
 
A really good video on fungus biology. If you use Mycorrhizae additivs in your soil, adding worm castings or other stuff packed with fungi, here is the posibillity to get basic insight in what fungui actually are. They belong to the Kingdom of Fungi, distinct from the Kingdom of Animals and Kingdom of Plants.

See root-fungal intetactions at 20 min.

 
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guess you should search your favorite forum first..lol! All that info is here and written up better. And use ONLY distilled or RO, you don't want to mix this at any point with tap water!

You can get the chems on ebay I think I paid $18 total and I can make gallons....lol!

This seems like a good protocol for

Making your own STS feminization mixture for a few bucks

http://forums.strainhunters.com/topic/6088-making-your-own-sts-feminization-mixture-for-a-few-bucks/
 
On Mycorrhizal Fungi




I make a variant of this.


I mix a 2 tbl spoons oath meal with 1 tea spoon Myco Madness (@BiG Plant Science), 1 1/2 cup soil and 1/2 cup worm castings. The mixture is moisted with water containing molasses, amino acids, kelp extract and fermenting nettle brew.

Myco Madness by Big Plant Science.
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Mix 1 tbl spoon per gallon in 2/3 the soil. Add the last 1/3 on top of the inoculated soil in order to prevent fungus gnats.
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Big Plant Science is a Danish company with a nute line designed by canna growers for canna growrs. Big Plant
Science has developed feeding schedules defined by the hardness of our local water sources.

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Both @XxxAuto and yours truely use Big nute line. I use base nutrients A&C, but @XxxAuto uses A, B&C. XxxAuto has softer water than me. Hw may experience soft hair after taking a shower. My hair is covered in a thin layer of CaCO3. When the tap water boils, CaCO3 immediately crystalizes on the surface.
 
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