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First Greenhouse 2019

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Wedding Cake x (unknown)
Custom Breeder & Strain
Orange Daiquiri x (Unknown)
Custom Breeder & Strain
Girl Scout Cookies
Custom Breeder & Strain
Chernobyl OG (Chernobyl x Headband OG)
Custom Breeder & Strain
Dreamband (Blue Dream x Headband OG)
Custom Breeder & Strain
Sundae Driver
Custom Breeder & Strain
Outdoor
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LST
weeks Technique
Topping
weeks Technique
Defoliation
weeks Technique
Soil
Grow medium
Grow Conditions
Week 12
Vegetation
45
cm
inch
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14 hrs
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14+ conditions after
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TC_Connoisseur TC_Connoisseur
5 years ago
~Update 07/13/19~ It's been a while, so this will be a big info drop on what has happened and how things are going today. The first thing you may have noticed in the pictures is how bad the plants looked at one point. They were beautiful plants, and I went and f*cked that up royally in the span of 4 days, more on this later. Luckily my plants are back on track and healthy once again and I have really tightened down what I am doing to avoid getting sloppy again. You probably noticed the male flower, I found my male plant so the fun little breeding project will be real! I got lucky with this, it was one of my 2 favorite plants of the bunch, again I'll jump into this later in more detail. Before we jump in, here is my current feeding schedule. Also note worthy is the plants are now potted up into their permanent homes, 45gal. ~Current and Final Nutrient Regiment~ - CalMg+ at 2ml added to every RO per gallon - ALL NUTRIENT AMOUNTS ARE ml/1gal - ALL FOLIAR done after dusk Monday - FLUSH EarlyVeg: Terp Tea V (7.5ml) LateVeg: Terp Tea V (10ml) Bloom: Terp Tea B (10ml) Tuesday VegFoliar: Plant Therapy EarlyVeg: RO Water LateVeg: RO Water Bloom: RO Water Wednesday EarlyVeg: SST Corn+Barley/Mykos + DME (5) LateVeg: SST Corn+Barley + DME (5) Bloom: SST Corn+Barley + DME(10) Thursday VegFoliar: Kelp Extract (30) BloomFoliar: Bloom Khaos (5) + Bud Factor X (5) EarlyVeg: RO Water LateVeg: RO Water Bloom: RO Water Friday EarlyVeg: Xtreme Tea + Azos/Mykos (15)+ DME (10) + NitroGuano (10) LateVeg: Xtreme Tea + Azos/Mykos (5) + DME (10) + PhosGuano (10) Bloom: Xtreme Tea + DME (10) + BudX + PhosGuano (10) Saturday (Start SST) EarlyVeg : Terp Tea V (7.5) LateVeg: Terp Tea V (10) Bloom: Terp Tea B (10) Sunday VegFoliar: Kelp Extract (30) EarlyVeg: RO Water LateVeg: RO Water B: RO Water SST = Corn 1cup/10gal & barley 0.5cup/10gal + 1ml Bloom Khaos, 18hr soak 3 days sprout ~Active Aerated Teas~ So lets talk about the evolution of my nutrient scheme, I went with the concept of a built up semi-"SuperSoil" with minimal inputs and I went a little overboard as I usual do, but finally I was able to get all of the nutrients I had set out to do in the first place. That is to say I am using RO water with a General Organics CalMg+ supplement, weekly Xtreme Worm Casting Teas, my "terpene enhancing" Roots Organic TerpTea, along with some mycorrhizae and bacteria all fed by Dry Malt Extract for 24hr as they bubble away in an actively aerated tea. Now that my schedule is consistent my plants seem extremely happy and are dealing with the heat in stride this week. Also worth talking about is how I have them spread out, basically I have such a heavily built up soil that I can't imagine feeding them daily would be a good thing so I have broken them up into a well balanced chart that feeds a little each day in a predictable and thought out way, the only thing that may not make it long run is the weekly flush, this has a lot to do with the soil I built but that is for the next part of this update. For now I went with a cycle that hits everything in a predictable way to keep consistent and hopefully not wreck my plants. ~Soil~ I went into this with a shotgun approach utilizing all of my left over nutrients from prior grows, I believe my amounts were right in the zone so I'm not overly concerned there but I am concerned about the soil composition. I wanted this bud to have the "terroir-of-the-land" in it and thought my heavily decomposed granite might have some micro nutrient value, well upon transplanting the other day I realized I added too much. My soil is now in the lowest zone very dense and compact, not very breathable and airy like I would prefer. So while I transplanted I also removed a little extra soil and mixed in some Coco and WormCastings to help break that up a bit. I think I will be fine but it's the one devil in the details that keeps me up at night, next year I intend to do a much heavier Coco and WormCasting based soil as opposed to the Sandy-Loam, peat, and Worm Castings I have this year. ~The Mishap~ So you will probably have spotted the eagle clawing and burning in the pictures, luckily at this time I can say the plants are healthy again but it was a serious scare. I've gone over the events that lead up to this devastating day in my head several hundred times to figure out what happened, so first I'll give you the events with no interpretations, then I'll explain what I believe happened and finish with explaining my corrective action. Please feel free to add your own 2 cents and maybe we can gain some extra insight into what happened and how to avoid it. Day 1: Plants Healthy, heatwave starting with early 90F+ (32.2C+) weather, preemptively sprayed with CalCarb as a calcium carbonate sunblock early in the morning just as sun is rising but hour away from direct sun, watered with filtered tap water. Day 2: Plants Healthy, heatwave hitting hard around 95F+ (35C+), Water plants with 10ml/gal of TerpTea Grow (first time at 10ml vs 7.5ml). Day 3: Plants heat stressing but healthy, instructions on CalCarb say to rinse after 36hrs, I'm at 72hrs so I rinse but instead of a water rinse I spray with Trifecta (trifecta contains an array of essential oils such as Clove, Thyme, Garlic, etc... also it contains citric acid and Acetic Acid) sprayed early in the morning as before, Watered with filtered tap water. Temps spikes today to 114F (45.5C), for everyone in Paris welcome to my normal hell. Day 4: WTF happened to my plants, burn marks on all leaves, mostly congregated on edges and veins, leaves curled into tight eagle claws, generally looks like hell. Noted similar burns on all other plants in the greenhouse treated with the same Foliar, but no nitrogen toxicity noted on other plants. Knee-jerk reaction is to flush, so I flush and flush hard, I also prep a WormCasting tea to feed the next day to replenish the soil with mild nutrients. Day 5: Nothing looks good, watered in the Xtreme Tea Worm Casting Tea. Day 6: Sever yellowing and obvious nutrient deficiency so Started a Temp Tea 7-1-1 Day 7: Just Sad, TerpTea 7-1-1 added Day 8: Dead leaves pulled to make them look very sad. NitroGuano tea 9-3-1 started and fed next day. Day 9-14: Overall stunted growth, but around day 9 new growth showed proper green color again. Day 15+: In full recovery mode, everything looks ok and they are healthy again. I personally believe that a "perfect storm" is the only way biological systems get so out of whack so I'm not going to blame one singular event here. That said I believe it all started with the Trifecta, to clarify this is a great product and I am to blame for spraying Acetic acid on calcium carbonate and not expecting a reaction. Although I couldn't see it chemistry dictates that an acid base reaction would have happened, as these reactions like baking soda and vinegar make a great cleaning agent I expect that the waxy layer was washed off my plants. I followed this reaction up with more Acetic Acid and Clove oil, two substances that in higher concentrations make excellent weed killers by removing the way layer and dehydrating the plant to death. I also did this during the day in high temperatures, with a simultaneous high nitrogen feeding. Naturally when a plant looses part or all of it's waxy layer it will evaporate more rapidly, that means it is taking up more water and nutrient. With my nitrogen feeding flooding into the plants they rapidly went into toxicity almost like a bad hydro mix. Now knowing that it had more to due with evaporation then soil nutrient concentration I know that I caused the second half of the damage with my heavy flush and slow to work organic nutrients. In the end I lost 2 weeks of vigorous growth and damn near lost my plants, the picture above are from day 4, imagine how they looked on day 8 after I pulled off 60% of each plant in dead leaves. ~The Lesson~ I learned a few things from this, like never follow up a calcium foliar spray with an acid based foliar spray. I have also changed away from Trifecta, partially due to price, partially due to self induced trauma. Currently I am using Plant therapy, a gently and better smelling product with similar results. I have also moved all sprays to night time only after the sun has gone down. My nutrient use has actually increased with the addition of Nitro Bat Guano Teas and the plants haven't complained once, they have actually been happy about it. ~The Male~ Out of all of the seeds I popped I have had 2 clear favorites, both of them were Dreamband seeds, a cross of Bluedream x Headband OG so it is quite a mix of OG, Haze, Blueberry, and Sour Diesel. The male I found from the start was the fastest sprouted and grower, it also shows some Sativa forward traits, things such as thin long leaves and tall stretching, this may not be the best for a commercial grower but it also comes with a fairly strong fruity/cheesy smell almost as potent as its purple stemmed sister. As my goal is to grow greenhouse/outdoor terpene forward plants this guy fits the bill almost perfectly. Also for bonus points the maturing early flowers are all turning a nice lavender/purple shade, so hopefully I end up with some good purple genetics. ~Breeding Project~ I have to say, I am stoked for this, to create my own strains that only my friends and I get to smoke is fun and I think I'll learn a lot by the time I'm done. Just to clarify so there is no confusion I am doing these crosses for myself, I do not intend to ever sell them so doing them is just purely for fun, if everything goes well maybe I'll stabilize them but with the still ridiculously low plant count laws we still have I can't legal do this the right way with 1000+ phenohunt and back crossing to stabilize is hard too because I am limited in the amount I can grow for my personal stash, and I really like variety so to hell with growing only 3 strains just to back-cross. One of the best things in this whole project is thinking up names for my crosses that aren't already taken so I can reference them in a legit way. One thing is for sure though, the name has to be over the top and ridiculous otherwise how could the smoke be good?😂 So if anyone can think of a better and more over the top name for these strains please let me know! Here is my current list of potential seeds from this project: Honeymoon Haze Wedding Cake (F) X Dreamband (M) Orange Dreamsicle Orange Daiquiri (F) X Dreamband (M) Unicorn Cookies Girl Scout Cookies (F) X Dreamband (M) Dae Dreamer Sundae Driver (F) X Dreamband (M) Dreamband F2 Dreamband Indica (F) X Dreamband Sativa (M) UtopiaBand Chernobyl OG (F) X Dreamband (M) ~Phenotype Selection~ Alright so lets wrap this up by talking about the particular plants I choose to keep and most importantly why. I do feel like the phenotypes I chose all had their good and bad to them but overall my selection process was dominated by a desire for the tastiest buds. As only (2) of my strains were really part of a pheno-hunt I will cover those first then finalize with updates on my selected "strongest" plants. DreamBand So this one had (3) distinct Phenos that I saw in my (4) seeds, (1) Sativa dominate, (2) Hybrids, and (1) Indica dominate that has strikingly red stems and a sweet orange/blueberry smell. In the bunch the wining smell went to the Indica, it also had the best growth structure being nice and bushy with strong side growth. The Indica also had a unique feature, its side branches are all a very deep red/purple that does not appear to be do to any nutrient issues as it has had that color since day one as a sprout. I did however find out during my mishap that it was a more delicate plant than the others. This became my pheno of choose, if I'm honest then I would have probably preferred this to be my male to pass on those red stems (hopefully flowers are colorful also) and it's structure. The runner up in smell was my Sativa, now the male, it was also the most vigorous grower in the garden and has some desirable traits, but what sets it apart to me is the wonderful sweet berry/cheese smell, reminiscent of blueberry stilton. to top this off it had lavender purple shades on its side branches from the beginning and it seems its flowers have also kept this so with any luck I will have some good purps next year. The losers here were the two I'm calling hybrid because neither showed fat or thin leaves, nor did they display any stretching or bushing, just middle of the road. To finish off their middle of the road mediocrity neither displayed a unique smell like the other two, although I'm sure they would have produced some good quality bud they didn't make the cut, so they got mulched. Chernobyl OG From the start these have not done anything too impressive but I'm hoping in flower that changes. The one thing that always stood out to me was the lack of terpenes. As with the DreamBand I had (2) in the bunch that stood out from the others and (2) that were muted in comparison, but unlike the DreamBand every plant had minimal to no smell. Of the two that did have a pleasant aroma I had (1) giving off Lemons/citrus and another giving off a Berry Kushy smell. unfortunately for the Lemony one the smell was so faint I went with the stronger berry/kushy aroma, both showed similar purpling with the Lemon forward one having a bit more but overall neither stood out. The other two that didn't make it were unique in the fact that a stem rub resulted in absolutely no fragrance at all. Wedding Cake This plant is strong, the branches are the thickest in the group so hopefully it's yield will follow suit, the smell is a sweeter kush like aroma but nothing too crazy, I'm hopping for some nice Vanilla notes in subsequent generations but we will see. Orange Daiquiri This girl is the stockiest and most stacked plant in the tent, paired with its extreme orange forward smell reminiscent of Purple Tangie I think I'm going to enjoy the hell out of this smoke but time will tell. I'm hoping to capitalize on that aroma paired with the purple of the DreamBand and the overall good terps in both will get me to my own version of a Purple tangie with better bud structure. Sundae Driver This girl is a keeper, I'm super happy I still have more of these seeds as this will be a mainstay in my grow rooms for now on. It's not just one trait that makes this girl worth growing, its several, to start with the smell is the most pungent in the greenhouse. With its signature mix of Berries, Oranges, Vanilla, and straight Funk it is what you smell when you walk in my greenhouse, and to think it we still have months until real flowers exist. Aside from the smell, the growth is strong and sturdy with a nice stalky stature, I know I will have to start worrying about Powdery Mildew later in the year as I was hit with it last grow but overall this is a hell of a strain. Anything crossed with this just has to be great. Girl Scout Cookies Yes, you read that right, Girl Scout Cookies, that deformed little seedling I wrote off and nearly killed on 3 occasions because I thought it was a lost cause is now growing strong! Its first topping was today so yields will be lower than my other strains and not much to report besides a clean bill of health as of today.
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Grow Questions
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseurstarted grow question 5 years ago
This will be my first greenhouse and dry amendment grow with several indoors under my belt. My expected problems this grow are likely to be insect and disease pressures specific to greenhouses, along with temperature regulation (115+F last year), suggestions are always welcome!
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Techniques. Defoliation
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Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimaranswered grow question 5 years ago
well just lets look whats will come to you. But be prepared for some insects you dont want^^. anf the best is to fight against them with predators, because its no closed envoirement , but semi opened. And yes i agree temperature is a challenge, but you have the big adavatage do have a roof, and a little control about heat, cold and ventilation. I sarted last year in greenhouse and was concerned about the temperatures and the RH. But weed grows under nearly every condition. Ive put them later outside. But my neighbour let them the hole cycle in the greenhouse. His problems e were thrips, mites, and in the late floweringthe humidity. He fought the insects with predatirs that worked bet for it, because sparying does not help... yellowstickers and nematode against thrips. predator mties against russet mites. and ladybug larvae/ladybugs against plantlice/ aphids. Biggetst challenge were lower temps and high th near the end of grow. We gace some airflow and defoilation, but seen alltogether it was successful
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TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseurweek 1
Thanks @Mrs_Larimar! That helps out quite a bit! Definitely going to deep-dive into the predator insects, lady bugs saved an indoor grow that got spider mites 4-5 weeks into bloom with no spraying at all, I’ll look into other predators too! Humidity should be easier for me as it’s always very dry out here come Aug/Oct and airflow in the greenhouse is already good/great but a few fans will be added...any experience with small scale evaporative cooling?
Ssomeguy
Ssomeguy
@TC_Connoisseur, Yeah I did look at it, but at that price (at least here) I might as well do something closer to a greenhouse with some cheap plastic, I do know the colour affects it, yeah. Kinda tricky/pointless setting up some protection when the plants have been growing for 7 months though. And it would cause additional light issues in itself, so even that's a compromise (I mean, I painted my walls white and used white pots because of low light/heat issues). Sure, for future plants maybe, but then again, I'd rather have better plants to begin with or let them adapt, so I just germinated some of their offspring and now those offspring (randomly pollinated yay! Like God and Mary, but probably by something like moths) get to experience fairly temperate dry winter instead of EXTREME summer! Not expecting much, but at least I have some experience now. I'm not kidding though, I've spent about $100-200 on my current plants (mostly soil amendments like basalt, vermicompost, DE and random necessary stuff like pots and some equipment/perishables), but excluding water (which I minimize usage of), time, effort and now drying electricity costs (mostly just a fan). Much of that I wouldn't (have to) buy again. Of those initial 36 plants from random seeds (most males were chopped and a few from pots moved indoors), 24 are female, 1 clone (from a flowering plant, just to test), not a single autoflower (which are ridiculously easy to grow but have their genetic drawbacks, judging by a friend's plants), with another 27 seedlings going well and another 20 or so just germinated from my current flowering plants. Unfortunately though, due to the heavy environmental stress, looks like I'm going to have to be quite creative in trying to salvage some of my larger plants. I basically just let stuff grow and see what happens, which has given me a lot of insight tbh (especially situational/contextual) about the plants and environment I'm dealing with, pest issues, diseases, etc. What is really difficult to understand is nutrient/environmental specificity for these plants, since it varies quite a lot between my plants, effects of other plants around them, etc. I'm not huge on trying to control things, but I would like to know what does what.
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@@Ssomeguy, If your talking about the Dry Ice Hash method of shaking the weed with dry ice in a bubble bag then I have done that several times, I do love the ease and yield you can get, but the quality isn't there. I normally use the dry Ice sift for either topical or edibles, it works great for either. You can also dust some on a bowl but its not the great full melt hash you can get from the Ice water method; also, you can't go backwards and use the dry ice sift to then make great hash in the bubble bags with water, there is too much broken down plant material. I like the idea of the normal ice, I'm assuming your talking about putting it directly on the soil above the root mass which would be fine for me since Im putting a 5cm-8cm thick layer of cedar mulch on top of my soil, which should prevent any shock or damage to the roots from getting direct contact with the ice cold water as it melts. I believe I read it in a High Times where they recommend for hydro growers with excessive temperatures in the grow room, but had temp control on their water reservoirs to chill down the root zone to beat the heat stress. I wouldn't go with Dry Ice directly on the soil though as it would likely frost burn some roots. The stones I'm also hesitant about because I know vineyards that love having stones under their vines to continue to radiate heat towards the grapes after the sun goes down. Have you tried Shade cloth? I would definitely look into it as an affordable option and it would help with the heat and light stress...If you do then color is actually important, in Vineyard studies they found that red cloth does increased fruit weight compared to green or black so spectrum does come into play for the plants.
Ssomeguy
Ssomeguy
@TC_Connoisseur, I'm sure I'll learn something, but I don't have a greenhouse (though looking to construct one or at least something approaching a greenhouse), I'm a noob, almost no budget so my thinking tends to be ghetto. I've been checking out dry ice extraction methods which probably led me to suggesting or thinking of using dry ice. I figured if for instance if I have smaller/younger plants at peak temperature times, maybe some smaller pieces of dry ice + normal ice with a cover temporarily and maybe something like stones around the plants could MAYBE work just before and during peak temp times (plants tend to use more carbon at higher heat too, from what I recall, can't be sure), effort though. Other than that, dry ice is fairly cheap here. 2kg + nice little coolerbox is like $4 (and that's about the lowest value option). Very situational, and I'm just taking almost random guesses, since I'd also like to know how to cool my plants. If I knew my plants were gonna grow as tall (3m+) as they did in the space they were in (60cm), I'd have definitely done some more preventative stuff (such as topping and a bigass cover), but I was worried about additional stress, couldn't really afford much and I can't do that at this stage. I've had terrible light/heat stress issues (not enough light early/late, too bright midday, same for heat, think boosted african sunlight in midsummer but only midday...and then all kinds of random weather), they're uncovered, etc, which has made them susceptible to all kinds of crap. Mostly been observational and reactionary (since I kinda want the plants, which are pretty much random, to adapt), with some sort of conservative approach in terms of trying to prevent what I could (or knew about), lots of research and stuff (obviously not enough), but since conditions vary so much and I'm inexperienced...
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Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 12
hi i really like the Names youve chosen.... they sound great and give ahint to their ancestors.. and you have learned it the hard way thats tough, i would say thank you for sharing yor knowledge, your hopes and thoughts. its a diary i absolutely will read again because of its multiple stuff to learn...a lot of things you mentioned iam not understanding yet( low knowledge about theat theme, but i will come back for reading again if iam reaching that level
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimar
@TC_Connoisseur,that should be that theme ....about breeding, backcrossing stabilizing... that is a big part of growing i havent touched
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@Mrs_Larimar, Thanks as always for your input and support! It is all a learning process for me too, I just try to find the best and most logical answer to what is happening, in other words plenty of theoretical knowledge but still working on the practical side every day. I'm not sure what part your talking about with the "Theat theme", assuming a typo there but if you clarify I might be able to point you in a direction to do some research of your own.
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 3
Omgoood, hard working Guy, it looks marvellous, very nice Growing site, and very well prepared, thy for sharing that informative and detailed diary
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimar
@TC_Connoisseur,just let her grow, either she change s(most time they do) or she stays a little weirerd. i wont be concerned at that stage
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@Mrs_Larimar, Thanks! It's been fun getting out in a greenhouse for the first time, a lot more room to work compared to indoor so the layout has been fairly fun and easy so far. I have found some adjustments to make this week, you can read those up in the update for today ( 5/2/19 ). P.S. Have you ever seen anything that the GSC with the tiny curled in leaves? it is a first to me and it makes me wonder if the plant isn't going to grow like that forever...
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 2
Hello. woooow........ very nice Pictures at the first to mention especially the one with your light setup....... and second very nice and detailed descriptions and reciepes.....i like it very much the way you are prepared , and your plans become reality... just the best whishes for your grow
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@Mrs_Larimar, Thanks, I just wish I had known of this site to document my previous grows! Keep checking in! I'm going to do my best to do updates once or twice a week and I have a lot more setup left to do...RO for my Tea Brewer was just set up yesterday, hopefully I will have some new pictures of that up in a few days!
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 5
Thy for sharing your Knowledge and writing it down , so easily to read...
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 1
It was a great outdoor year last year, but not long enough for all plants to finish, my neighbour, used the greenhouse and could let them stand until they were finished. had to harvest sooner because of rain. He got humidity probs too , but not as bad as me
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 1
Tha should mean high rh....... Yes a greenhouse is a good option if you have sun and Shadow dring the day, Iven in springtime i love it to put my girls inside. They do well with the temperatures/ cahngeing temps, its a nice kind of growing. But in summer it was to hot in our greenhouse and the grow slowed/ but outside too. but you are always well protected against rainiy weeksin the end of growing time, because that the worst enemy for outdoors..... so iam gonna follw up and look
Psilocubensis
Psilocubensisweek 12
How was the transplant? The fabric pot is somehow hard to get the plant out without hurting it...
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@Psilocubensis, You are correct, they are really hard to transplant out of, the roots seemed to be attached to the walls of the pot like Velcro. I was pretty gentle and took my time working it out of the pot and I did not notice any major stress, but it took a while. For that reason I returned to white 2gal(8L) plastic grow bags for the “teen” stage before putting in the final 45gal(170L) pot.
3cflJohn
3cflJohnweek 4
You need more calmag. Add 100ppm I. Next watering
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@3cflJohn, Would that be for the deformed growth on the GSCs? If so I have 2 that are doing the exact same thing, different soil all together so that factor is isolated but I would be more then willing to give this a shot on them, I'll go with foliar first to see if that helps and if so I'll start adding it to the water...I'm thinking its genetics or seeds that were stored improperly at this point, if nothing else one of them has actually started growing normally so there is some hope.
CoastGrower
CoastGrowerweek 5
That sucks about the GSC hope the next ones will become big trees. :) good luck
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@CoastGrower, Hopefully! If these (2) don't work then I'll just have to grow a duplicate of a different strain. Thanks!
Strife957
Strife957week 5
Ur plants look gr8! I like ur setup :)
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
@Strife957, Thank you, it's been a fun project so far!
GrowBeforeHoe
GrowBeforeHoeweek 5
Healthy little plants, detailed comment, nice diary! Keep growing 👍🏻
TC_Connoisseur
TC_Connoisseur
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 13
I missed thsi report about your Journey indeed.......And i hope for the next grow
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 12
Hi how are you and how are the plants, really waiting for some update^^
Mrs_Larimar
Mrs_Larimarweek 8
They all look vigor and strong...... and more than 5 months to go iam very courious
DoDrugs420
DoDrugs420week 14
Great job!
DoDrugs420
DoDrugs420week 14
Spectacular my dude.