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Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A - 2.5 Gallon

Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A - 2.5 Gallon

Regular price $85.50
Regular price $106.88 Sale price $85.50
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Description

Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A and B is a 2-part base nutrient series for hydroponic gardens, built to deliver complete grow-stage plant nutrition in a streamlined format. This premium base nutrient works as a core fertilizer foundation, supplying the essential elements crops rely on for vigorous growth across the crop life cycle.

Cali Pro Grow A and B is formulated around precise concentrations and ratios, with a full spectrum of macro and micronutrients in the program. It includes the primary macronutrients nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, plus secondary macronutrients calcium, magnesium and sulfur. For micronutrient coverage, the formula includes chelated iron, copper, manganese and zinc, along with the other micronutrients needed to support consistent development and strong overall plant performance.

For shoppers who want the numbers, Cali Pro Grow A is 3-0-0 and Cali Pro Grow B is 2-2-5. This split 2-part nutrient series is designed to keep your base nutrition complete while staying simple for day-to-day growing, making it a practical option for both novice and expert growers who want a dependable foundation without extra complexity.

The nutrient inputs are built from high-grade raw materials and a defined mineral profile. In this series, Grow A is derived from nitrate and urea-based nitrogen sources, supported by chelated micronutrient inputs such as iron EDTA, copper EDTA, manganese EDTA, and zinc EDTA, along with trace components including boron and molybdenum sources. Grow B is derived from key mineral inputs including potassium nitrate, monopotassium phosphate, magnesium nitrate, ammonium nitrate, and magnesium sulfate, rounding out the multi-element base that supports balanced vegetative growth.

Emerald Harvest positions Cali Pro as made for hydroponics and engineered specifically for high-yield plants, giving growers a consistent base nutrient platform for hydroponic systems where reliable, complete mineral nutrition matters. It also has a stated shelf life of 3 years or more when stored under normal conditions, supporting consistent use cycle after cycle.

Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A and B is a good fit for growers who want a premium base nutrient series made for hydroponics, with chelated micronutrients and a complete essential-elements profile for vigorous grow-stage development.

How To Use

How to Use Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A - 2.5 Gallon

Step-by-step mixing and feeding instructions for Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A - 2.5 Gallon.

Mixing & preparation

Fill your reservoir or watering container with clean, room-temperature water first. Shake the bottle of Emerald Harvest Cali Pro Grow A - 2.5 Gallon well before every use. Using the feeding schedule below, measure the recommended dose and add it directly to the water while stirring. Allow the solution to mix fully before adding any other fertilizers, additives, or supplements.

Always add nutrients to water — not the other way around. Mix thoroughly between products to ensure an even, stable nutrient solution.

Week-by-week feeding schedule

Vegetative stage — Grow A

  • Week 1: mix 0.5 ml per litre of water or nutrient solution.
  • Week 2: mix 0.75 ml per litre of water or nutrient solution.
  • Week 3: mix 1.0 ml per litre of water or nutrient solution.
  • Week 4: mix 1.25 ml per litre of water or nutrient solution.

Flowering stage — Grow A

  • Week 1: mix 1.25 ml per litre of water or nutrient solution.
  • Week 2: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 3: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 4: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 5: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 6: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 7: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 8: do not use this product during this week of flowering.
  • Week 9: do not use this product during this week of flowering.

Tips for best results

  • Maintain pH and EC/ppm within the range recommended for your growing medium and crop.
  • Use fresh nutrient solution whenever possible and avoid leaving mixed solution stagnant for long periods.
  • Store nutrients in a cool, dark place away from direct sunlight and extreme temperatures.
  • Keep bottles tightly sealed when not in use to reduce air exposure and preserve product quality.
  • Use clean measuring tools and regularly rinse or clean your reservoir, lines, and irrigation equipment.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Do not mix different nutrients or additives together in concentrated form before adding them to water.
  • Do not exceed the recommended dosage unless you are following a tested, crop-specific feeding plan.
  • Do not skip pH or EC/ppm checks when growing in hydroponic or soilless systems.
  • Do not allow the nutrient solution to freeze or overheat, as this can damage the formulation.
  • Do not ignore the directions on the product label for your specific crop, growth stage, and system type.

Warnings & Safety

Warning – Important Safety Information

This product may cause mild skin irritation and eye irritation. Avoid unnecessary contact with skin, eyes, and clothing. Use only as directed.

General safety precautions

Read and follow all instructions on the product label and any accompanying documentation before use. Keep out of reach of children and pets. Do not ingest. Avoid breathing vapours, mist, or dust that may be generated during handling or use.

Wear appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE), such as protective gloves, long sleeves, long pants and closed-toe footwear. When there is a risk of splashing or airborne particles, use safety glasses or other suitable eye and face protection.

First aid – skin contact

IF ON SKIN OR HAIR: Remove contaminated clothing immediately. Rinse skin with clean water for several minutes, then wash with mild soap and water. If irritation or redness develops and persists, seek medical attention. Wash contaminated clothing before reuse.

First aid – eye contact

IF IN EYES: Rinse cautiously with clean water for several minutes, keeping eyelids open. Remove contact lenses if present and easy to do. Continue rinsing. If irritation persists, obtain medical advice.

First aid – ingestion and inhalation

IF SWALLOWED: Rinse mouth thoroughly with water. Do not induce vomiting unless instructed by a medical professional. Seek medical attention if you feel unwell.

IF INHALED: Move the person to fresh air and keep them comfortable for breathing. If coughing, breathing difficulty, dizziness or other symptoms occur, seek medical assistance.

Storage and handling

Store this product in its original closed container, in a cool, dry and well-ventilated area. Protect from extreme temperatures and direct sunlight. Keep container tightly sealed when not in use.

Avoid release to drains, natural waterways or outdoor soil. Dispose of unused product and empty containers in accordance with local regulations and the directions on the label.

Important: If medical advice is needed, keep the product label or container available. Always follow the specific instructions and safety recommendations provided by the manufacturer. This safety notice is intended as general guidance and does not replace official label directions or documentation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Is ammoniacal nitrogen (N) and why do plants need It?

Ammoniacal Nitrogen (N) is a plant-available form of ammonium (NH₄⁺) that provides a steady, gentle source of nitrogen for healthy green growth. Unlike fast-release nitrogen types, ammoniacal nitrogen feeds plants slowly, helps stabilize root-zone pH, and works well in cooler temperatures. It is commonly used during early vegetative growth because it supports strong leaf development without burning young roots. If plants show pale leaves, slow growth, or weak stems, they may need more available ammoniacal nitrogen.

What makes ammonium nitrate different from other nitrogen ingredients for plant growth?

Ammonium nitrate is unique because it provides nitrogen in two plant-usable forms at once, which can give a fast green-up while still supporting steadier uptake depending on the root-zone conditions. That matters because it can correct true nitrogen shortages quickly, but it also needs careful balance since too much can push overly soft growth and trigger pH drift and nutrient imbalances.

Why is boron (B) essential for strong plant development, and what makes it different from other micronutrients?

Boron is essential because it stabilizes cell walls, supports root and shoot growth, and regulates sugar movement throughout the plant. What makes boron unique is its limited mobility and extremely narrow range between deficiency and excess, which causes new growth to show symptoms rapidly when levels fall out of balance.

Why is calcium important for plant growth?

Calcium is important because it builds and stabilizes plant cells as they form, acting as the structural support that keeps new growth strong and functional. Unlike other nutrients that drive color or speed of growth, calcium’s role is unique because it controls cell wall strength and membrane stability, making it essential for healthy roots, shoots, and long-term plant resilience rather than quick visual results.

Why do growers use calcium nitrate instead of other calcium sources?

Calcium nitrate is important because it supplies calcium in a fast, highly available form that supports strong new growth and healthy root tips, while also providing nitrate nitrogen for steady, usable growth energy. It’s unique because it delivers calcium together with nitrate nitrogen, making it especially effective during rapid growth phases when plants need both structure-building calcium and immediately available nitrogen at the same time.

Why is chelated copper (Cu) important for plant growth, and what makes it unique from other micronutrients?

Chelated copper is important because it supports key enzyme systems that drive energy flow, strong tissue formation, and healthy new growth, while chelation keeps copper available and stable in the root zone. It’s unique because plants need it in extremely small amounts and it can become unavailable or toxic more easily than many other micronutrients, so chelated forms help deliver precise, predictable copper without big swings.

Why is chelated iron important for plants, and what makes it different from other iron sources?

Chelated iron is important because it keeps iron usable for plants even when growing conditions would normally lock iron out, helping prevent the classic yellow-new-leaf symptom caused by low chlorophyll production. It is unique from other iron sources because the chelation protects iron from becoming insoluble, making it a more reliable way to correct iron-related chlorosis when regular iron can fail.

Why is chelated manganese (Mn) important for plant growth?

Chelated manganese is important because it keeps manganese available for photosynthesis and enzyme activity even when pH or water chemistry would normally lock it out, and it’s unique from similar micronutrients because it strongly supports the plant’s energy-processing systems that drive healthy, resilient new growth.

Why is chelated zinc (Zn) important for plants?

Chelated zinc is important because it keeps zinc available for uptake even when pH or root-zone conditions would normally lock zinc out, helping plants form normal-sized, healthy new growth—something that makes zinc uniquely different from many other nutrients that mainly affect older leaves or simple leaf color changes.

Why is copper EDTA used in plant nutrition instead of plain copper?

Copper EDTA helps keep copper dissolved and available to roots longer, so plants can absorb it more consistently when copper would otherwise tie up in the growing medium. It’s important because copper supports enzyme activity and healthy new growth, and it’s unique because the chelate improves predictability while allowing very small, controlled copper dosing.

Why is molybdenum (Mo) important for plant growth?

Molybdenum is important because it helps plants convert nitrogen into usable building blocks for chlorophyll and growth, and it’s unique from many nutrients because it mainly supports enzyme-driven “nutrient use” rather than directly building plant tissue.

What does nitrate nitrogen (N) do for plants?

Nitrate Nitrogen provides a stable, easy-to-absorb form of nitrogen that supports steady growth, strong foliage, and reliable plant development without sudden nutrient swings.

Why is sodium (Na) important to manage in plant growing?

Sodium is important to manage because it can quietly build up in the root zone, making it harder for plants to absorb water and essential nutrients like potassium, which leads to slow growth and leaf burn. It’s unique from most nutrients because the problem is usually excess and imbalance—not a shortage—so fixing it often means preventing buildup and restoring root-zone balance rather than adding more feed.

Why is total nitrogen (N) important for plant growth, and what makes it different from other nutrients?

Total Nitrogen is important because it directly drives leafy growth, chlorophyll production, and overall growth speed, which sets the pace for the entire plant. It’s unique because the “total” number can include different nitrogen forms that behave differently in the root zone, meaning the same total amount can produce very different results depending on the nitrogen type and plant stage.

Why is urea nitrogen important for plant growth?

Urea nitrogen is important because it can supply a high-impact source of nitrogen that supports chlorophyll production and fast leafy growth, but it’s unique from other nitrogen forms because it usually must convert in the growing environment before roots can use it consistently, making correct application and conditions critical for avoiding loss, burn, or sudden imbalance.

What makes iron EDTA effective for fixing pale new leaves?

Iron EDTA keeps iron dissolved and available long enough for roots to absorb it, which is why it can quickly improve new growth color when iron is tied up in the root zone. It’s unique because the EDTA chelate balances stability and accessibility, making iron more reliably usable in mildly acidic to near-neutral conditions compared to many non-chelated iron forms.

What makes manganese EDTA different from other manganese sources?

Manganese EDTA is unique because the EDTA chelate keeps manganese stable and more available during delivery, helping plants absorb it more reliably when manganese would otherwise lock up. This matters because manganese drives key enzyme functions tied to photosynthesis and healthy new growth, so consistent availability can prevent pale, chlorotic young leaves and stalled vigor.

What does sodium borate do for plants?

Sodium borate mainly supplies boron, a micronutrient plants need in tiny amounts to build healthy new growth and develop flowers and fruit normally, but it’s unique because the safe range is narrow and too much can quickly cause tip damage and leaf burn.

What does sodium molybdate do for plants?

Sodium molybdate supplies molybdenum, a trace micronutrient that helps plants convert nitrate nitrogen into usable building material, so growth and green color stay steady; it’s unique because it works as a tiny-dose “nitrogen unlocker” rather than a bulk nutrient.

Why can urea burn plants even though it’s a common nitrogen fertilizer?

Urea can burn plants because it must convert in the root zone, and that conversion can create a concentrated, temporarily harsh micro-zone that stresses roots, especially if urea is piled, left on the surface, or not watered in. That conversion step is what makes urea unique compared with nitrogen forms that are already plant-available, so correct placement and moisture are critical.

What makes zinc EDTA better for preventing zinc lockout?

Zinc EDTA is important because it keeps zinc available in the root zone when pH or water chemistry would normally tie zinc up, helping new growth develop normally before deficiency symptoms get worse. It’s unique from other zinc forms because the EDTA chelate shields zinc in solution, making delivery more consistent when conditions are not ideal.

Safety & Technical Documents

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Nutrient Feed Chart

Vegetative — Week 1

  1. Grow A
  2. Grow B
  3. Bloom A
  4. Bloom B
  5. Emerald Goddess
  6. King Kola
  7. Honey Chome
  8. Root Wizard

Flowering — Week 1

  1. Grow A
  2. Grow B
  3. Bloom A
  4. Bloom B
  5. Emerald Goddess
  6. King Kola
  7. Honey Chome
  8. Root Wizard

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