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BunnyBud Growbox Diary – Week 1: Banana Purple Punch Auto (FastBuds)
First entry! I just put a Banana Purple Punch Auto seed in water. This is just a test to see how a plant reacts to slightly higher-than-ideal temperatures. I’ll be planting two more FastBuds seeds in winter, when the room is cooler (around 21–22°C) and the growbox can be managed more optimally.
The growbox is 60×50×104 cm, enough space for two autoflowers in 6.5 L pots with some LST. Lighting is the Spider Farmer SF-1000D LED on adjustable pulleys, high enough to leave space for airflow, but low enough so the plant will get plenty of light.
Ventilation: the 130 m³/h exhaust actively removes hot and humid air directly out the window. Air comes in passively from the room. Inside the box, a USB clip fan is running at maximum, pointing toward the extractor, to avoid stagnant zones. During a 1–2 hour test without plants, with the lamp on and fan at max, the box temperature reached 32°C. This is manageable for a test but higher than ideal for real growth.
The room itself, with AC on, stays around 26°C. Without AC, in late August, it could easily rise to 28–28.5°C, creating a very stressful environment for the plant. So, the AC is necessary—for me and for stability of the setup.
Substrate is BioBizz Light Mix with 25% perlite, perfect for aeration and drainage. Nutrients are Fish-Mix, Grow, and Bloom, with pH around 6.2–6.5. Dosages will be gradual to avoid stress.
In a few days, this seedling will be transferred to the 60×60×180 cm growbox, where the temperature will drop a few degrees, allowing for better management and growth conditions.
For now, this little seed is just a test—let’s see how she handles the slightly hot environment. Excited to watch her grow and keep this diary updated!
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Used method
Glass Of Water
Germination Method
1
Week 1. Vegetation
12d ago
1/15
6 cm
Height
16 hrs
Light Schedule
28 °C
Day Air Temp
6.5
pH
168 PPM
TDS
26 °C
Night Air Temp
6.5 L
Pot Size
50 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 1
Top Lemon
0.1 mll
BunnyBud My First Autoflower Growing Indoor 🌸
Finally! I've decided to document my very first autoflower growing experience, starting from scratch with a 60×50×104 cm growbox. It's small, I know, but perfect for learning the ropes and figuring out how everything works.
Reality Check: My First Tests
During preliminary tests, I discovered something interesting and slightly concerning: starting from 26°C room temperature with the AC running, my growbox hits 28-29°C in about 2.5-3 hours. The maximum peak? A whopping 32°C with lights on and the box fully closed!
For now, I've put a damp towel inside - sounds like a DIY hack, but it actually works to stabilize temperatures a bit and reduce those thermal swings.
The Economics of It All
Smart plugs let me monitor power consumption in real-time - currently running about €0.11/kWh. In a few weeks, I'll have to turn off the AC (my wallet will thank me!), so the first weeks will be characterized by high temperatures around 30-31°C. Fortunately, September and October should bring cooler conditions.
My Germination Strategy
During germination, I'll keep the lamp 60 cm from the seedlings - that's the maximum height I can manage in this box, but it should minimize light and heat stress on those emerging roots. Later, when the plants are stronger, I'll transfer them to the larger 60×60×180 cm growbox.
Oh, almost forgot! A 350 ml/h ultrasonic humidifier is on its way, which should give me much more precise humidity control.
My Current Setup
The Growbox: 60×50×104 cm - perfect for two autoflowers in 6.5L pots using LST (Low Stress Training).
Lighting: Spider Farmer SF-1000D suspended via pulley system near the ceiling, with about 4-5 cm clearance for heat dissipation.
Ventilation: 130 m³/h extractor (4" diameter) that expels hot, humid air directly out the window - genius for preventing the room from becoming an oven! Plus a USB clip fan for internal air circulation.
Climate: Ambient temperature stable around 26°C; inside the box 27-28°C without lights, jumping to 32°C when they're on.
Substrate: BioBizz Light Mix combined with leftover perlite I had - exact quantity will depend on what's available, aiming for the right balance between aerated structure and water retention capacity.
Nutrition: BioBizz Fish-Mix for vegetative growth, plus Grow and Bloom. pH maintained between 6.2-6.5. No CalMag for now.
Monitoring: Two digital hygrometers connected to an app - one inside the growbox, one in the room. So I can check everything from my phone!
Humidification: Two traditional humidifiers, plus the ultrasonic one coming for finer control.
My Observations and The Plan
The ventilation system works well - it manages to prevent heat and humidity from building up both in the box and the room. That's a win!
The germination strategy is simple: lamp at 60 cm and hope for the best. The first weeks will be challenging with those high temperatures (30-31°C) when I turn off the AC, but then autumn should help me out.
The plan is to grow the seedlings in the small box, then transfer them to the big one for flowering. Meanwhile, I'm monitoring everything: temperature, humidity, power consumption. The goal is to optimize the on/off cycles.
Final Thoughts
This first cycle is more of a technical experiment - I want to understand how to manage climate and lighting, stabilize temperature and humidity according to what the plants will ask for at each stage.
The transfer to the larger box and winter approaching should improve conditions for optimal growth and flowering.
I'll update this diary with all the quantitative data: yields, organoleptic characteristics, setup modifications. It'll be interesting to see how this first adventure turns out!
Stay tuned for the next update!
Ps: there is also a hole where the air enters passively, only it is hidden by the fan ❤️ 😅
==UPDATE==
BY INSERTING AN ULTRASONIC HUMIDIFIER I ACHIEVED THESE RESULTS, WHICH IS PERFECT
🌡️ Temperature: 23.3°C / 73.9°F
💧 Dew Point: 16.0°C / 60.8°F
💧 Relative Humidity: 63.6%
☁️ Absolute Humidity: 13.3 g/m³
💨 Vapor Pressure: 18.2 mbar
🌱 VPD (Water Stress): 0.66 kPa
💨 Air Density: 0.012 kg/m³
✅ Comfort Index: 100/100
🌿 Heat Stress: ✅ Optimal
🔋 Battery: 100%
⏰ Last update: 08/17/2025 12:49:35
I created a Python script that, starting with just 2–3 parameters measured by my Govee H5075 hygrometer, uses real scientific formulas to calculate all the other environmental values. This way, I can monitor my grow box much more effectively! I knew AI and programming skills would come in handy for this too lol ❤️🤣
==UPDATE 22 AUGUST==
Photoperiod:
➜ Emergence (day 0): 1 day without artificial light.
➜ Days 1–2: indirect natural light from the window.
➜ 17 August: first day under the lamp → 8 hours.
➜ 18 August: increased to 15 hours.
➜ From 19 August: stabilized at 16 hours of light per day, likely to remain this way due to practical reasons.
Lamp distance:
➜ From 21 August: distance reduced from 60 cm to 50 cm → noticeable and more consistent growth.
Plant status:
➜ Healthy plant with gradual growth.
➜ LST (Low Stress Training) will be applied in the next days to control height and shape.
Watering & nutrients:
➜ Method: Med-Man.
➜ Water at 130 ppm, pH between 5.8–6.0.
➜ From 22 August: start of light foliar spraying (10 minutes before lights on) with pH 6.0, using a mixture of 3 parts water : 1 part Grow fertilizer.
➜ Purpose: slightly stimulate the plant during the early growth stage.
Internal climate:
➜ Average temperature: 26–27 °C, with peaks up to 28–29 °C when the air conditioner is off.
➜ Humidity: kept stable using humidifier + damp cloth inside the box, which lowers temperature slightly and stabilizes the environment.
Planned improvements:
➜ Purchase of:
➜ Dehumidifier for better humidity control.
➜ Wi-Fi hygrometer for more precise monitoring.
➜ Adjustable extractor fan, to better manage airflow and reduce nighttime noise.
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2
Week 2. Vegetation
5d ago
1/30
9 cm
Height
16 hrs
Light Schedule
29 °C
Day Air Temp
6.5
pH
183 PPM
TDS
65 %
Air Humidity
24 °C
Night Air Temp
6.5 L
Pot Size
45 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 2
Fish-Mix
0.2 mll
Top Lemon
0.1 mll
BunnyBud ==UPDATE 23 AUGUST – PREPARING WEEK 2==
➜ Growth is starting to pick up a bit now that I lowered the light from 60 cm → 50 cm → 45 cm.
➜ Leaves developed noticeably in just one day.
➜ Height increased by 1 cm in a day, from 6 cm → 7 cm.
➜ Tomorrow I’ll start feeding with very low nutrients, around 200–210 ppm, just ¼ of the recommended dose.
➜ Overall, everything looks good. Only minor temp fluctuations, sometimes hitting 29.5°C because I couldn’t run the AC, but windows are fully open.
➜ Plant seems a bit small for week 2, but many growers say this is completely normal. Could be due to:
• Low light intensity early on
• Slight stress from handling and lighting schedule adjustments (first day out of light, then 8h → 15h → 16h/day from day 3 onward)
➜ No major issues; plant is healthy and progressing well.
~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~
==Update August 26, 2025 – Autoflower Indoor 60x60x180 cm==
Strain: Banana Purple Punch Auto
Seed: Banana Purple Punch Auto
Plant age: 10 days from sprout
---
1. Substrate and Fertilization
Soil: Biobizz Light Mix (nutrients already available for about 4 weeks).
Fertilization mistake: On day 8, nutrients were added following the Madman method → overfeeding occurred.
Symptoms: leaf tips slightly yellowing, young leaves changing color.
Corrective action: nutrients stopped immediately; irrigated with pH 6 water.
Note: Biobizz Light Mix already contains nutrients for the early growth phase; fertilizing too early can cause chemical stress even without measuring EC.
---
2. Lighting
Light: Spider Farmer SF1000D
Distance from canopy: 40–45 cm
Practical note: ideal distance to avoid light burn during the first two weeks.
---
3. Climate and Temperature Management
Grow box temperature: 28–31°C (current days, no AC, window open in room).
Room temperature: 26°C with 66% RH.
Grow box humidity: 64–68%
Problem: evaporative cooling or humidifier cannot work efficiently when the air is already very saturated.
Scientific analysis – evaporative cooling:
Text for calculation:
ΔT ≈ (T_air - T_wet_bulb) * ((HR_max - HR_current) / HR_max)
With RH ≈ 66–68%, ΔT is very limited ( 65%; it only works with drier air
BTW, I managed to get my grow room temps down by putting some ice cubes in front of my ventilator. That cooled it down a few degrees. If you want another DIY hack. They really do work - sometimes! ;)
@Scandinavia, great job man! 👌
I’m testing some “low-tech” tricks myself: I use an ultrasonic humidifier which already drops the temp by about 1–2°C just by pushing out that cool mist. On top of that, I placed a folded, really damp towel inside the box near the pot — it helps me keep humidity more stable (so I can run the humidifier at low or half power even on the worst days), and it also adds some evaporative cooling that brings temps down a bit more.
Right now I keep the windows open, and temps outside are around 28°C, sometimes hitting 30. I’ve turned off all the AC units because I wanted to see how far I could go just with these methods. So far I’m managing to keep my box at around 27.5–28°C, while my room itself stays between 26–27°C. With good air exchange you can really do a lot, and of course a bigger grow space makes heat dissipation way easier.
I’m starting to “read” the parameters day by day — I can already tell how the box will react depending on the weather outside, and that helps me keep things as stable as possible. When winter comes it’ll be a whole different story: heat won’t be the issue anymore, but humidity control will become the main challenge.
That said, I’m really glad I found someone like you here. Hope we can share tips and become good grow buddies! 🌱🔥
@BunnyBud,
Thanks for the tips, i will diffently try that cold damp towel method! And I have same problem with the temps, but thank God it will soon get way colder outside especially where im at :D I will be following you too and for sure learn!
Very detailed. Love it! I have the same lamp as you and im really interested in how it performs. I have never used it before but I just started a grow with it. I may have to buy another for flower unless I see others who manage to use it succesfully for blooming in a tent thats around 80x80x180.
Good luck, will be following!
Ho piantato anche io una banana purple punch e lho fatta crescere in indoor per le prime settimane anche se la lampada (mars hydro da 300w) scaldava abbastanza con l'utilizzo di ventole la temperatura percepita dalle piante era un po più bassa ma la saputo gestire bene
@Randagio, Queste sono le mie prime vere coltivazioni 🌱, in generale e soprattutto con FastBuds. Circa 6-7 anni fa avevo già provato con questa genetica, ma l’esperimento era stato interrotto per vari problemi. Già allora avevo notato che le piante FastBuds sono molto resistenti, tollerano bene condizioni difficili e sono semplici da coltivare, quindi ho deciso di ripartire proprio da loro.
Quest’estate ☀️ ho completato un ciclo outdoor con Gorilla Cookies 🍪 e Orange Sherbet 🍊, concluso circa un mese fa, ed è stata un’esperienza fantastica. La Gorilla Cookies mi ha aiutato molto con l’ansia e ha avuto anche un effetto antidepressivo. Sono varietà forti e di ottima qualità, e per il momento voglio continuare con FastBuds perché la considero una banca di semi eccellente, con genetiche affidabili.
In futuro, però, vorrei passare a femminizzate fotoperiodiche 🌙, per testare cannabis a uso medico (non CBD, sempre THC) e varietà specifiche per ansia o altri scopi terapeutici, da utilizzare come medicina e come strumento di connessione con l’universo 🌌.
Con la mia SF 🔆, in estate, raggiungo anche i 32 °C nel box. Per ora gestisco la temperatura con un grande asciugamano bagnato 💧 all’interno: sfrutta il principio del raffreddamento evaporativo, in cui l’acqua assorbe calore per evaporare (calore latente di evaporazione) e abbassa la temperatura dell’aria. In questo modo, invece di arrivare a 32 °C in un’ora, ci mette 4-5 ore; quando scende a 28-29 °C, ribagno l’asciugamano e la temperatura si stabilizza di nuovo.
Questo problema lo avrò solo per poche settimane 📅; da metà settembre nella mia stanza ci saranno circa 21-22 °C, quindi anche nel box le condizioni miglioreranno, visto che l’estrattore scarica direttamente all’esterno dalla finestra
@Randagio, in più è un arrivo una tenda da 60x60x180 in modo che le temperature possono scendere di 1 o 2 punti e in piu posso lavorare meglio e avere più piante dell'attuale 60x49x104