AnotherNewbie
collecting exp
Hey ^-^
First of all, thanks for taking your time to maybe help me out a bit & share your suggestions, I really appreciate it
So I'm relatively new to growing in general and I'm going to take care of a few autos (Honey Peach Auto CBD & Jack Herer Auto) next season. The enviroment is a southern sunny balcony in a mild but overall pretty good climate.
I digged my way through lot's of blog posts, forum threads and so on in the last couple months and gathered many informative stuff, but I'd still need help choosing a solid soil & eventually an organic fertilizer.
I want to keep the whole thing as easy as possible and don't want to use any synthetic/mineral additives as well as bottled fertilizers. I don't live near any grow shops so I guess I'll have to work with what I have.
I've read a lot medium-related and don't really know any further. Many sources say that the seedling will be damaged from any NPK nutrients, but I also read that you should place the automatics directly into the last pot (around 11l?) as re-potting them would maybe shock them & harm their growth for a few days in a crucial way.
But if I'd fill the final pot with growing-them earth with no relevant amounts of nutrients in it, the plant would have to less nutrients for both vegetative & flowering stage I guess?
So should I use regular potting soil from the garden center nearby & put a layer of growing-them earth on top of it to give the seedling in the first week or two a nutrient-poor terrain? Would this even work as the roots will stretch down a lot for sure?
Or should I consider re-potting from a tinier pot without any nutrients into the 11l final pot with nutrient-rich earth?
I also thought about using the organic "Easy Boost" slow-releasing capsule fertilizer from RQS as I don't really know if the feeding from the earth's nutrient content itself will suffice for the whole lifespan of the plant.
Maybe someone out here could drop some of their thoughts and suggestions on this topic, I'd be very, very glad'n'thankfull
First of all, thanks for taking your time to maybe help me out a bit & share your suggestions, I really appreciate it

So I'm relatively new to growing in general and I'm going to take care of a few autos (Honey Peach Auto CBD & Jack Herer Auto) next season. The enviroment is a southern sunny balcony in a mild but overall pretty good climate.
I digged my way through lot's of blog posts, forum threads and so on in the last couple months and gathered many informative stuff, but I'd still need help choosing a solid soil & eventually an organic fertilizer.
I want to keep the whole thing as easy as possible and don't want to use any synthetic/mineral additives as well as bottled fertilizers. I don't live near any grow shops so I guess I'll have to work with what I have.
I've read a lot medium-related and don't really know any further. Many sources say that the seedling will be damaged from any NPK nutrients, but I also read that you should place the automatics directly into the last pot (around 11l?) as re-potting them would maybe shock them & harm their growth for a few days in a crucial way.
But if I'd fill the final pot with growing-them earth with no relevant amounts of nutrients in it, the plant would have to less nutrients for both vegetative & flowering stage I guess?
So should I use regular potting soil from the garden center nearby & put a layer of growing-them earth on top of it to give the seedling in the first week or two a nutrient-poor terrain? Would this even work as the roots will stretch down a lot for sure?
Or should I consider re-potting from a tinier pot without any nutrients into the 11l final pot with nutrient-rich earth?
I also thought about using the organic "Easy Boost" slow-releasing capsule fertilizer from RQS as I don't really know if the feeding from the earth's nutrient content itself will suffice for the whole lifespan of the plant.
Maybe someone out here could drop some of their thoughts and suggestions on this topic, I'd be very, very glad'n'thankfull
