Oldest plant is 14 days old, the rest are 1-2 days younger.
Zoap is the left row. Oreoz is in the middle. Garlic Storm^2 is the right row of 3 plants.
The zoaps demanded a transplant and probably did the others 1-3 days earlier than I prefer, but turned out fine. Yet again, 11 transplants and zero shock. It's almost as if someone made some shit up and repeated it ad nauseum until the mob believed it. In six years I've yet to see a plant get 'shocked' from potting up.
The Oreoz that sprouted with little nubs for cotyledons is falling too far behind. That leaves seven keepers among the Zoaps and Ooreoz. Have two weeks to decide between 8 plants and 10 plants. The yield from the first cycle should be good enough that either is fine.
Put a little more effort into the seedling stage. Maintaining a 60% RH instead of a typical 35-40% in winter due to furnace. They might be a day faster than normal? Not seeing a huge difference but will continue to use the humidifier as it's only 35-watts and simple enough to refill.
A slight logistical issue is brewing. At least 2 of my flowering plants look to be slow as fuck developing. I may need more time than was alotted. Luckily, if I only transplant 8, that number of 5-gallon pots will still fit the 4x4. Ten would be tight given a 11-12" diameter of the pots. Hopefully, I don't have to waste a few days of electricity twiddling my thumbs for 2 slow flowering plants to get the fuck out the way, lol.
@Ultraviolet, I know right? You'd expect more videos with terrence howard explaining math very poorly and documentaries on the "electric universe theory."