The Grow Awards 2026 🏆

Remote growing Stardawg and Blue Dominia

5
27
8d ago
Stardawg
Flavour Chasers
720 Light Emitting Diodes/600W
Omega
720 Light Emitting Diodes/600W
Omega
Basic thing of Amazon
No name
Soil
Canna
Indoor
Room Type
LST
weeks 3-6
Topping
weeks 5
ScrOG
weeks 6
19 liters
Pot Size
0.98 liters
Watering
Start at 7 Week
G
Germination
20d ago
_Apex_ Start of the grow from an old friend I know. So helping him online via pictures and chat. He’s older so been some fun mistakes and all sorts. Looked leggy from pics to me, no doubt due to blurple light from Amazon that had a recall on it :/ Gave him options and went with cheaper omega 720s.
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Used method
Paper Towel
Germination Method
1
Week 1. Vegetation
20d ago
_Apex_ Week 2 pics, had some high temps and low humidity so options given again. He picked a smart room humidifier which is great as can monitor data but prob not as accurate as a probes INKBIRD
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2
Week 2. Vegetation
20d ago
Nutrients 2
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series
2 mll
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series
2 mll
_Apex_ Looking ok here. Told me he was using RO water so added cal mag to his shopping list. Not sure when he did might be this week but topping was done bit early imo when it was as he got excited when I sent him YouTube videos about it. lol Temps were hot at times and not really stable humidity acceptable. Range of 18c-30c at times :/
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3
Week 3. Vegetation
20d ago
Nutrients 4
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series
2 mll
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series
2 mll
Rhino Skin - Advanced Nutrients
Rhino Skin
2 mll
_Apex_ He had a crack at some lst on the bigger plant. Worried about temp ranges. Inspected photos of exhaust and it was taped up with holes in it!!! Literally blowing hot hair nowhere lol Repairs were made and temps better
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Used techniques
LST
Technique
4
Week 4. Vegetation
20d ago
Nutrients 5
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series
2 mll
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series
2 mll
Rhino Skin - Advanced Nutrients
Rhino Skin
2 mll
_Apex_ Told him to try even them out as looks like ones more sativa leaning. One indica and then two balanced and the autos being tiny. Soft wires were used
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Used techniques
LST
Technique
5
Week 5. Vegetation
20d ago
18 hrs
Light Schedule
26 °C
Day Air Temp
6.3
pH
Weak
Smell
58 %
Air Humidity
21 °C
Night Air Temp
5 liters
Pot Size
1 liters
Watering Volume
45.72 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 5
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series
2 mll
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series
2 mll
Rhino Skin - Advanced Nutrients
Rhino Skin
2 mll
_Apex_ Week 5 post topping and training a few of the branches out. Conditions stable now. 26-27c lights on 21c lights off He has active intake set to come on at 27off at 25, exhaust idles till 28c then assists.both to window 2ft tube heater in basic thermostat plug and probe set to 21c Humidity 58% solid Thinking of a scrog net now?
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Used techniques
LST
Technique
Topping
Technique
Grow Questions
_Apex_
_Apex_started grow question 20d ago
Should I getting him to install net now, and train for a week then flip?
Solved
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00110001001001111O
00110001001001111Oanswered grow question 20d ago
You are probably good to flip any time... you have 4-5 weeks of strong vege growth after flip. Those plants will easily fill in the gaps in that time frame. I've got more spacing and about to flip - put my money where my mouth is. Figure they will 2x larger at least in 4-5 weeks and have 18-24" of vertical growth, assuming medium is properly constituted and your fertigations are dialed in well... Too many mounts will make the plant shorter, etc... There are a lot of variables here, so it's hard to give a one-size-fits-all assessment. If you are new to growing and don't have all that stuff dialed in, you may want an extra week to be safe, but if it gets over-crowded, don't be afriad to prune off some growth in the first couple weeks of flower. You only need about 2.5-3 colas per sq ft... maybe 4 per sq ft for those phenos that only give golfball nugs and less densely populated bud sites. Stick to this greatly reduces maintaenance (pruning/defoliation needs) and reduces effort to trim with better bud to leaf ratios. More is not better... Also, by sticking to this, there is no need for a 'defoliation' - a mass removal of leaves. So, same potential yield, less work, less wasted resources, less useless behaviours like defoliation etc etc... less wasted time... saves electricity.. the benefits are endless compared to a 'wild' canopy. Figure you want the entire light footprint absorbing light - this is about the tops of the leaves where 99% of the photosynthesis takes place. Beyond that, you want 'enough' colas to distribute the yield... the more colas, the more distributed the yield will be. Big colas aren't necessarily better as they are more susceptible to pathogens. I'd suggest enough colas to have good-sized buds that are easy to trim... not necessarily the biggest buds possible. Be systematic.. you'll learn faster. Try more / try less with different grow cycles.. see what you like. For the most part, if you capture all the light, asusming ~35-40 DLI at canopy level, then your yield is virtually inevitable and relative to genetics at that point, as long as you have 'enough' colas you'll get the weight your light provides. As i improve my process, the goal is to reduce how much i have to prune off... I want to flip to 12/12 and do as minimal lollipopping as possible. Anything pruned off is wasted time and resources growing it. Some waste is inevitable - anything below my scrog level is destined to fail, so it has to be removed. Efficiency is beneficial in many ways.
6
Week 6. Vegetation
15d ago
18 hrs
Light Schedule
29 °C
Day Air Temp
6.3
pH
Weak
Smell
53 %
Air Humidity
19 °C
Night Air Temp
18.93 liters
Pot Size
0.98 liters
Watering Volume
45.72 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 6
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part A Professional Series
2 mll
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Grow Part B Professional Series
2 mll
Rhino Skin - Advanced Nutrients
Rhino Skin
2 mll
_Apex_ Growth seems slowed this week, has two days where tent temperatures dropped from 26.7 solid with active fan on. To unable to break 26.1 with no active fan on never hitting 27 to trigger where every night without fail before 27+ ez in minutes? Ambient air ranges same over several previous days. Suspect led going from 600w to 400w? Told friend to dump the active intake from window to lung room as lights off were dropping to 17c with heater set to 20c. Strangely after the moving of active intake to lung room, it stabilises at 26ish then fee hours later after I moaned at friend it jumped up to 29.5 hitting the exhaust trigger. Was it the led? Don’t know don’t care anymore it’s stable and got him to install smart plug on light so I can see wattage ;) Net not filled out really but it’s getting flipped end of this week 🤞
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Used techniques
LST
Technique
ScrOG
Technique
7
Week 7. Flowering
8d ago
12 hrs
Light Schedule
26 °C
Day Air Temp
5.8
pH
Weak
Smell
53 %
Air Humidity
19 °C
Night Air Temp
18.93 liters
Pot Size
0.98 liters
Watering Volume
45.72 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 6
Rhino Skin - Advanced Nutrients
Rhino Skin
2 mll
Sensi Cal-Mag Xtra - Advanced Nutrients
Sensi Cal-Mag Xtra
2 mll
Voodoo Juice - Advanced Nutrients
Voodoo Juice
2 mll
_Apex_ Not much happening this week so not much to see. Friend looped off some lower branches and moved pots for a better spread. Hoping things look better next week. Autos going well, expect buds to start appearing in next couple of weeks
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Grow Questions
_Apex_
_Apex_started grow question 6d ago
Should he defoliate the autos or just leave? When I did before I just tucked and leaves that blocked buds. Same question for stardawg photos, when should he do it? Is it constant through flower or certain times and leave it?
Solved
Techniques. Defoliation
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00110001001001111O
00110001001001111Oanswered grow question 6d ago
Defoliation - technical term meaning to remove a ton of leaves for mostly whimsical reasons. It can be used in less formal ways too simply to mean removing some foliage. An individual's perception can make for a bit of a difference. If you proprly managed the canopy and didn't over-crowd, there is no reason for a defoliation. Removing a select leaf to avoid condensation (or some orther high-risk issue) while also not creating a gap in leaf coverage to absorb all the light possible, is okay, too. Usually just bending or shaping the plant can accomplish the task without cutting it. If you don't over-crowd, there is never a reason to remove leaves or try to improve light penetration etc.. More colas is not better. AFter a certain point you don't add weight, you just have smaller, more distributed buds. dli, temp, rh, and co2 levels will be the limit on yield, not number of colas. If you provide enough building blocks relative to those factors, yield is almost automatic as long as you don't do anything too detrimental. There's really not much difference with autoflowers. Those that perceive great differences usually do crazy stuff to their plants, lol. If you put a photo on 12/12 from seed, i bet it's just as 'sensitive' to overfertilization as an autoflower. The real problem is people over-fertilize their photoperiods. I give the exact same formula and concentration to autoflowers i've grown and they look just as healthy and just as good of outcomes as i'd expect from a photoperiod with 2-3 weeks of vege time. So, obvioulsy some major holes in the perception that autoflowers need a drastically different .. anything. why you should keep all the leaves you can possibly keep... They do more than 1 function. You may know that carbon is one of your primary limiting factors. Leaves are lungs. Less leaves = less carbon intake. It'd be nearly impossible to overcome that negative with any perceived benefit of removing leaves. This alone is reason not to remove leaves. Transpiration, light absorption, nutrient and sugar storage ... leaves are important organs to the plant. Don't remove them for bro-science reasons. Removing leaves does not cause any magical reaction in the plant. All it does is motivate the plant to grow more leaves, lol. If theplant has too many leaves relative to its environment, it'll shed a few at the bottom. The plant knows better than you how many leaves it can maintain. Don't make that choice for the plant. "blocking buds" is also not a good reason to remove leaves. Cell differentiation!! LEaves perform certain tasks they evolved to perform. Buds, the same... Buds are sex organs. They are for reproduction. They do not contain 1/100th of the photosynthetic potential as the top layers of a leaf. MAximizing light on buds is not going to benefit you much. Again, a non-crowded canopy should have plenty of 'light penetration.' But, don't overvalue it... leaves nearly light capture much more light (umol/s is a rate) than lower leaves. Light spreads out very fast. The further a leaf is from the light source the more significant this effect is.. lower leaves capture less light -- again, maximizing this is not going to overcome what you lose by removing leaves above it -- mathematical certainty and not an opinion. A full canopy with no gaps and 'enough' airflow / light penetration is all you need. don't overthnk the last two parts. Stick to ~3 collas per sq ft and the rest will take care of itself. Less effort, less time wasted, fewer resources wasted on growth you prune off... etc etc so many dominos as to why you will have better outcomes, ceterus paribus, not doing bro science stuff like (mass) defoliation. The sugar produced by photosynthesis does get used more locally than not, but that is not evidence to get light on or near buds. Sugar goes where it is needed. that's the whole role of the vascular tissue. When a concentration gradientn forms near greater growth (apical dominance dictates this, not where light hits) it draws more sugar to that area of the plant quickly. Sugar is highly mobile. Where it is synthesized in the plant is mostly irrelevant to the yield it will translate to. Based on environment, buds will be decent down to a particular depth whether they get a tone of light or not.. .again, assumes a non-crowded canopy. Most of the misunderstanding on this topic comes from the effects of a crowded canopy, which is a self-inflicted mistake anybody can avoid. common sense -- in a crowded canopy it's gets dark pretty quickly.. at some point extreme light deprivation may have a real effect of concern.. but again.. if you don't crowd the canopy, that's not an issue, lol. I expect good buds as deep as 16-24" without purposely removing leaves to get light on lower buds (unnecessary effort). The exact depth depends a lot on the genetics of the plant in front of you, too. Stuff that is congested and mushed up against each other near bottom never turns out well.

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