Transplanted them to there final pots, using fabric pots btw. Still using ffof soil to avoid transplant shock. Almost one hour after transplant they started drooping a little which I figured is normal. Letting them grow for one week then flipping them to flowering. Only watered them with distilled water with 2.25 mg of calmag with pH of 6.5
I transplanted the blueberry into a 1 gallon pot after 8 days of sprouting, I know it's a little early to be doing so, but it went well no roots were harmed in the making of the transplant. My seedling should recover right?
Yeah it might take a couple days for the roots to adjust if it is a different soil, but it will be fine. Nothing to worry about. Good luck with your grow!
4 weeks into flowering the highest my humidity has reached 60 percent when it rains where I am located, when it doesn't rain it's at 48 percent. I know it should stay between 40 to 50 percent. My question is if my humidity hits up to 60 percent, chance of bud rot is what?
60% RH is not that bad tbh you just need to have proper ventilation and air circulation between the buds. So put your fans blowing in the canopy but not too strong so it wont damage them. (You can also direct the fan on the wall if it feels too strong to face the plants.
Bud rot and any other mold stuff likes cold temps so during night it is more important to control the humidity but still shouldn't worry if basic stuff is okay in your tent 👌🏿
allow me to be the first to welcome you to the public gardens of Grow Diaries ! 👏
Im Glad you made it here !
Here's to a Plentiful Harvest in your Future !
👍
The transplant should not be a problem at all.You can optimize the conditions in setiing up a humifidier.
http://www.just4growers.com/media/23631/vpd_2degree.gif
because the are developing much better, if you give them the right Rh according to the temperatrures and growstage
@DaddyPrime, she stretched double her size from when she was in veg, I applied major low stress training on her through the 3rd week of flowering. I had to keep up every few days moving her branches.
Milky trichomes on both plants Alaskan purple already showing a little amber trichomes there harvest date is set for tomorrow. Only 8 weeks of flowering and they look great, wasn't expecting a monster yield for my first indoor grow but the buds look and smell great.
It's day 42, and I'm gonna give the girls a quarter of the recommended nutes before I switch her lights tomorrow. The reason is because they were transplanted with ffof soil which is already rich with nutes but I will be also adding the 2.25 mg of calmag as well. pH will be 6.5
I know it looks like I transplanted blueberry on the edge of her final pot, but it's from her intence LST. Her trunk is actually in the bottom of her lower nodes.
I noticed that where I topped blueberry she started growing her main stem again so I think I FIMed her lol. The tips of Alaskan purples bottom fan leafs started to turn light green so I gave her some fresh distilled water with 2.25 mil of calmag with it. Ph was 6.4 and they both look healthy now so hopefully I fixed the problem.
Topped blueberry today and this was my first topping ever so everything from here will be a brand new experience. Blueberry has been growing at an alarming rate so far compared to Alaskan purple so hopefully topping blueberry will give time for Alaskan purple to catch up.
The littlest leafs on blueberry yellowed up and curled up. I figured it's the pH cuz I have been using the same gallon of distilled water for a week and I Kno it drops in pH as soon as you open it. So I pinched the little leafs off and went and bought a new gallon of distilled water and watered them asap. And won't water them again for 2 or 3 days, has this happened to anyone else's plants? And what was the answer to fixing it? I have cal mag but don't think it's time to start feeding them yet cuz they have been in fox farm ocean forest soil only 12 days, and I know they can survive on those nutes for up to 4 weeks. Any help would be appreciated. I will be adding a pic of the blue berry after I tore the littlest leafs off.