😴Week two went so smoothly it was almost boring, in terms of day to day maintenance.
💩There was a yellowing of all the babies, which turned out to be a lack of nutrients and was resolved at their first feeding.
💩We're battling low humidity - sitting in the 50% range - as we keep the fan on for longer to keep that air circulating. As they feed through their roots now it's not a biggie, and spraying the room down more often will help.
💪They have a ton of life and are shooting up fast! At the end of week two/start of week three we've got a root showing through one pot already.
👉We are slowly introducing nutrients to the watering schedule. Cocos A & B is our main jam for every indoor grow, partly due to size constraints, partly due to budget; either way we get brilliant results from simple a nute routine.
👉The tent got a small humidifier (COVID so far putting plans for a larger one on hold) and a small fan this week. The fan points above the babies, making them shiver just enough to promote strong bodies. The humidifier is to help keep the humidity up, but it's not enough 😑
😋Are we dreaming of that smell or is it starting to come through? A light skunk for sure.
no it doesn't.. temperature by itself does not have the ability to change the chromosomes..
(it's a little different when stressing a larger plant into a hermie, but that's part of the lifecycle and not necessarily "changing genetics")