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Rooting-in dryback after transplant

Rheaun_Grows
Rheaun_Growsstarted grow question 5 months ago
Looking at the last line of week 4 in my diary, should I extend this 15% dryback with shots at every 1% or so dryback over a couple days to encourage rooting or will she develop roots if I go to vegetative watering tomorrow?
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Week 4
Roots. Too few
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AutoflowersSucK
AutoflowersSucKanswered grow question 5 months ago
Dry back is always good. As long as it's not to the point of wilt. Dry back encourages roots to explore for water and food and the result is a more robust root system. It's similar in concept to air prune. It's normal for a plant to have some die back of it's roots. It encourages lateral root branching and exploratory growth. Not only that, but dry soil holds way more oxygen than wet soil, and that's why cannabis flourishes in soil on the dry side rather than always soaked. I've always been a hydroponic water culture grower, but I've recently decided to try coco coir. People always say coco is hydroponic, but it's really not in my opinion. DWC water pumps don't clog up with perlite and coconut fibers.... I know it's inert, but still. Hydroponic is roots suspended in water to me, or in rock wool or hydroton, or lava rock. Basically something that requires constant water flow. Coco is the same idea as rock wool, but rock wool won't clog a water pump so fuck off lol When my plants are full size in 3 gal fabric pots i have a consistent watering/feed schedule on my last crop. I fed on Monday. Each pot got 2 liters of nutrient solution. Tuesday, Wednesday, no water or food. Thursday's Each pot got 2 liters of water with calmag. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, no food or water. Then repeat the weekly routine. Worked well. Only prob i had was a salt build up in the soil which caused a plant burn around week 3 or 4 of flower which is why i recommend flushing between week 2 and 3 even if your plants seem fine. It's a preventative strategy which i think is a insurance policy against toxic salt build up and resulting plant burn resulting in reduced yield. You topped that plant pretty early. I usually top at the 5th or 6th node. Looks like she'll be ok though.
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Rheaun_Grows
Rheaun_Growsanswered grow question 5 months ago
After 24 hours dryback was about 20%
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BerrySweetHigh
BerrySweetHighanswered grow question 5 months ago
I always let the top inch of the soil dry out completely before watering again. This is working for years without overwatering or dry for too long. And I always give 10% from the pot volume in water.
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m0use
m0useanswered grow question 5 months ago
I agree regular wet dry cycle should be fine. If in the future you feel its to wet try adding more perlite into the mix, upto 50% with some mediums. This helps it drain well and prevent it from holding onto to much water. Good Luck!
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Angus_MacGrower
Angus_MacGroweranswered grow question 5 months ago
The root system is already well developed, so you can resume the nutrient programme as normal, and the wet/dry cycles will do the job. On the other hand, I think you're topping very early.
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