Planted in mother earth Coco + Perlite (comes buffered) this one and her sisters popped their head in shell off within 12 hours. Mixed Dyno Myko in the Coco and watered with great white before planting covering the plants with sandwich bags with poked holes. Haven't fed yet but will be using ENVY A&B, CalMag+, ENVY Grow during veg and ENVY Bloom trigger during flower (schedule can be seen on ENVY nutrients website).
Looks absolutely beautiful man. Great work, If I may offer some advice. I notice you are around week 6 of flower at this point & still have a real nice tight temp gap between lights on and off. In veg & early flower its good to do this until the plant has finished growing vertically so we can limit unwanted stretch. But once you are at around weeks 4 to 6 of flower and that vertical growth is finished, If we then begin to widen that temp gap to beyond 10 degrees between lights on and lights off we send signals to the plant that instead now cause it to chunk up and get dense & put extra energy into the budding process and resin production.
The reasoning for this is the genetic responses to environmental stimuli that convince the plant the season is ending soon and it wants to do what it needs to do to reproduce at its best potential as a female plant that produces seed generally. So in veg & early flower it will want to grow tall to cast its seeds out, But once that vertical growth is done it will want to get nice big dense flower clusters to produce seed & get very sticky to attract as much pollen as it can. So we manipulate it to do these things with enviormental triggers. Light deprivation works good, We dial our lights back and checkerboard them towards the end. Also really cold feeds work great too.
If you have a minute check out my 200 light 7,000 plant diary & follow my profile. If you ever have any questions feel free to ask man. Happy growing and keep up the great work.
@LegacyMarketFarm, I keep forgetting to change that night temp. It's actually 65 at "night". I will definitely check out your plant diary. Thanks for the tips!