Cash Express – Pheno A | Week 3
A Picture of Vigor
Welcome back to another week of the 8×8 Adventure, where twelve cultivars are being documented individually under a 12/12-from-seed schedule. Each phenotype receives its own dedicated diary, allowing us to observe not only cultivar differences but also the subtle variations that appear between sister plants sharing the same genetic foundation.
Week 3 has been a week of acceleration.
The entire room received a substantial increase in light intensity, moving from approximately 370 µmol/m²/s PPFD to 700 µmol/m²/s PPFD at canopy level. Nutrient strength increased alongside the lighting, and the plants have responded with enthusiasm.
Growth rates are increasing, branching is becoming more apparent, and the room is beginning to transition from seedlings into young plants with real structure and personality.
Among them, Cash Express Pheno A is making a very strong first impression.
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Week 3 Environment
🌡️ Temperature: 27.4°C
💧 Relative Humidity: 55%
💡 PPFD: ~700 µmol/m²/s
🌱 Medium: Plagron Lightmix
? Growing Method: 12/12 From Seed
💦 Water Consumption: ~0.9–1.2L per day
Feeding Schedule
Days 18
* EC 1.0
* pH 5.99–6.0
* Approximately 1L
Days 21–
* EC 1.3
* pH 6.0
* Approximately 1.2L
The environment remains stable, which allows each cultivar to express its genetic potential without external stress factors influencing development.
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Cash Express Pheno A
Some plants attract attention because they are unusual.
Others attract attention because they are simply doing everything right.
Cash Express Pheno A belongs firmly in the second category.
Looking through this week’s photographs, the first word that comes to mind is:
Vigor.
Everything about this plant communicates health.
The leaves are broad and evenly developed.
The coloration is rich and consistent.
The stem is sturdy.
The internodal spacing remains compact.
And perhaps most importantly, the overall symmetry is excellent.
From above, the plant displays a clean, balanced structure that many growers hope to see at this stage of development. Each new node seems to emerge with confidence, stacking neatly above the previous one while maintaining a very organized architecture.
The increased PPFD appears to have been welcomed rather than merely tolerated.
Instead of stretching toward the light, the plant is building mass.
The canopy is widening.
The stem is thickening.
The branching is becoming more defined.
This is exactly the kind of response growers hope to see when increasing light intensity.
One of my favorite observations this week is the contrast between the mature fan leaves and the fresh emerging growth.
The older leaves provide a strong foundation while the new growth pushes upward with remarkable energy, creating that vibrant layered look that healthy plants often display during rapid vegetative development.
There is a confidence to this phenotype.
No strange leaf shapes.
No unusual growth patterns.
No hesitation.
Just steady, healthy progression.
Sometimes perfection can be boring.
But in the garden, perfection is still beautiful.
And this plant is undeniably beautiful.
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Reading the Plant
One of the most important lessons in cultivation is learning to observe rather than assume.
This week offered a perfect example.
When PPFD was increased to approximately 700 µmol/m²/s, the goal was not simply to provide more light.
The goal was to see how the plants would respond.
Cash Express Pheno A answered quickly.
The leaves remained comfortable and relaxed.
The plant maintained healthy posture.
New growth accelerated.
Color remained strong.
These signals tell us that the plant is utilizing the additional photons effectively rather than becoming stressed by them.
This is why environmental monitoring is so valuable.
Plants communicate continuously.
The challenge is learning how to listen.
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Structure and Development
At this stage, Pheno A is developing into a plant that could potentially become a very balanced individual later in flower.
Several characteristics stand out:
* Excellent symmetry
* Strong central growth
* Healthy branching development
* Compact internodal spacing
* Consistent leaf morphology
* Strong response to increased PPFD
The architecture currently suggests a phenotype capable of building a dense, productive canopy while maintaining a manageable structure.
Of course, the real story is still ahead.
Week 3 only gives us the first hints of what this plant may become.
But those hints are promising.
Very promising.
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Looking Ahead
Over the next week, I will be watching closely for:
* Continued branch development
* Response to the higher EC feeding schedule
* Growth rate compared to neighboring cultivars
* Structural changes as additional nodes form
* Early indicators of flowering transition under the 12/12 schedule
If the current pace continues, this plant could quickly establish itself as one of the stronger performers in the room.
For now, she remains one of the cleanest examples of healthy development in the entire project.
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Thank You
A huge thank you to everyone following along with this journey.
Thank you to the entire GrowDiaries community for providing a place where growers can document, learn, share experiences, and support one another.
Thank you to Plagron for the nutrition and cultivation support powering this project.
Thank you to Zamnesia for the genetics, equipment, and opportunity to document these cultivars from seed to harvest.
And thank you to every grower, reader, supporter, and curious visitor who takes time out of their day to follow these updates.
The plants grow because of biology.
The project grows because of community.
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Growers Love and see you next week.