
Budwise
See it. Know it. Grow better.
Cannabisfeedingschedule
Save feed steps, nutrients, pH, EC, PPM, history.
Plan
Steps
Log
Feeds
Keep
History
Feed schedule
Blue Dream / week 4
Steps
6
Feeds
14
Supplies
9
Today
Plan feeds per plant
Create private feed steps by phase, week, day offset, or order for each plant.
Log actual feedings
Turn a planned mix into real feeding history with pH, EC or PPM, volume, and notes.
Preserve supply snapshots
Logged feeds keep product names and doses stable even when supplies change later.
How Budwise helps
Cannabis Feeding Schedule Tracker
Built as a private grow workspace, these pages describe real product workflows that connect plant history, photos, notes, readings, and Diagnosis context.
Plan feeds per plant
Each plant can carry its own feed steps, nutrients, targets, and notes instead of sharing one generic schedule.
- Save phase, week, day, or ordered steps
- Track nutrients, product names, and dose notes
- Keep pH, EC, PPM, volume, and runoff together
Turn plans into history
A schedule is only useful when actual feedings become searchable plant history.
- Log real feedings from planned steps
- Snapshot product names when logged
- Review feeding history before Diagnosis
Explore workflows
Jump into related grow workflows without losing the current context.
FAQ
Quick answers for growers comparing notes, diagnosis, schedules, and environment tracking.
What is a cannabis feeding schedule?
A feeding schedule is a private plan for nutrient mixes, pH, EC or PPM targets, volume, and timing by plant.
Can Budwise track nutrients and doses?
Yes. Budwise can save nutrient supplies, feed steps, product names, dose notes, and logged feeding history.
Can I log pH, EC, and PPM?
Yes. Logged feedings can include pH, EC or PPM, runoff readings, water volume, nutrients, and notes.
Are feed schedules the same as reminders?
No. Feed schedules are planning aids; they become history only when you log an actual feeding.
Can each plant have its own feed plan?
Yes. Budwise feed schedule steps are per-plant, so different strains, stages, and grow styles can stay separate.