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#21
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The clones have sexed and I now know which mothers I want from groups 1 & 2:
C99 - 'Grapefruit' C99 - 'Pineapple' A11 X C99 'Alpha' C99 X BB 'Bravo' Everything has been in the flower room with the exception of one cloner used to sex the plants - that's in the veg room. My plan is to hang the veg lights (Procyons, any T5s I may want) in the veg room, move Group 3 there and take cuttings from the mothers in groups 1 & 2 to clone and ultimately use as mothers. These clones (2 for each mother) are to be placed in rockwool cubes for ease of transplant into the dutch buckets & put into the cloner unit where if all goes well they will sprout roots & be transfered into the permanent home of the mothers: the dutch bucket system. There's a ton of construction that must be done - manifolds for the chiller/icebox units, hanging the ducting, the HPS lights, etc. but it should not take too long before "Phase Two" will be up and running. Right now It's about making some space in the flower room, getting clones that will eventually serve as mother plants and setting up the veg room. Stay tuned. Here are pictures of the plants from 10/05/09: |
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#22
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Here are some pictures and some info about where the plants are as of today.
Group 1 is now 15 weeks + 1 day old (3 1/2 months). Mother plants 'Grapefruit' & 'Pineapple' are looking bushy and healthy. I removed one plant from the system that was between the two as it was very, very small and not worth flowering in my opinion. Group 2 is 11 weeks + 5 days old (2 1/2 months). As you can see, several plants have been culled: A 'delta', B 'delta', B 'golf', C 'alpha', C 'bravo', C 'charlie'. Again b/c they were just too small to even consider flowering out (or they sexed male). Plants that are female are: A 'alpha', A 'bravo', B 'bravo', B 'foxtrot'. The others are likely females - but have taken a while to sex and the plants I wanted most as mothers have proven to be female. Group 2's mothers are A 'alpha' & B 'bravo'. They stand out heads and shoulders above the rest. The others will be kept to flower out, the new Key for Group 2 no looks like this: Bc X X Ba Be Bb* Bf Aa* X Ab X Ac X X reservoir * connotes the plants slated to be used as mother plants. Group 3 is 7 weeks + 3 days old (1 3/4 months) and shooting us like, well, weeds. The deformed blueberries have not improved, however there are about 3 acceptable specimens in the group. This group is to be moved into the veg room while the other 2 groups (1 & 2) will be kept in the flower room & flowered out very shortly. They are too young to take cuttings from to sex them just yet & I may need to move them into flower units to give them more space to grow. I should mention that in addition to spacing them out to 3 units, group 3, unit 3 was put under 3 T5s on 10/3/09 and appears not to have suffered for it & is thriving. Here is a last look at the plants as they are in the flower room: |
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#24
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I'm pleased with what it's doing for me so far. It's got a lot of blue in the spectrum so I've just recently trained it on my oldest plants to contain the stretch during flower (more on that soon to follow). Heat hasn't been a problem for me. They have pretty good penetration - I'd say to a definite 2 1/2 feet - 3 feet if you want to be generous. I wouldn't flower with it on it's own, given the very blue wavelength for one and the intensity needed for those very dense, large flowers. For now, I'd say LED only grows are only feasible for small scale growers, just in my opinion, I have a friend who's absolutely loving his LED only grow - but he's in a much smaller space than mine - for him it cleared up many of his issues, heat being a top priority. But now I'm using it to keep a handle on those plants that have gotten kind of tall and are now flowering. How effective that will be should be interesting and I'll definitely be reporting on that.
ETA: I've also used T5s for vegging the Unit 3, Group 3 plants and as you can see - the results are lovely. True, they are my indica dominant or totally indica strains, but they have that nice tight internodal spacing and lush growth. They're under 4 T5, 4 foot bulbs that I hung together - price wise, the set up costs as much as one Procyon - I've been extremely happy with the results from both - I guess it would come down in that case to your preferences & needs.
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My First Grow: Aeroponics, LED veg, Super HPS flower, CO2 sealed room Grow Journal Discussion Thread Last edited by Apollonia; 10-19-2009 at 04:34 PM.. Reason: Additional thought |
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#25
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Yea thanks for the detailed response. So I guess it is true then, no LED's for flowering huh? The main reason I was looking into it was the heat issue. If Im running a 1000W HPS that heat has to go somewhere and undetected. Currently in my veg Im using 4' Fluorescents as well which seem to be giving them plenty of light especially in the blue spectrum with the cool bulbs, however still without ventilation figured out or an efficient way to flower(apparently not LED) w/out heat im kinda stuck.
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09 Wineee
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#26
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Quote:
I do have 2 other strategies you might be interested in: if heat becomes an issue - I'm thinking of utilizing that heat to help heat my home by either venting up into the space between the drop ceiling & the floorboards or venting it into a grate in the floor of the room above the grow - I can do this b/c the air pulled in is not scented w/MJ as it's part of a sealed system. If scent becomes an issue or I don't want to vent into my house for whatever reason I have the option of venting the exhaust into the space between my basement walls and the concrete foundation. If none of these solutions apply to your situation I have heard about venting your hot air out your dryer vent - that way it just looks like you're doing a load of wash. Other people suggest venting into an attic - personally I'd make sure that that attic was well insulated before I did that. Another suggesting I've heard is to vent up your chimney - I'd do this only in the day as I have heard FLIR cameras cannot read in the daylight & at night it would look like a plume of heat coming form your chimney - yes you could have a fire burning in there, but again, like the dryer venting idea - I'm not sure if it would be as stealth as no venting at all. |
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#27
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10/18/09 Update:
Begin flowering of Groups 1 & 2: The flower room has been set-up in it's final form with three exceptions - I'm using a portable air-conditioner as a dehumidifier, as my little dehumidifier has not arrived yet. Two: the icebox cooler is now attached to the can filter instead of to the vented hood system where it will ultimately go - as the lights are being cooled by drawing cool air from outside the house, I thought this was a better use of the icebox. Three: The second lighting set up hasn't been hung yet as it is not needed at the moment. The 1/3 HP chiller is running, cooling the 50 gallon reservoir which contain 2 pumps: one 1800 GPH MagDrive Pump directing water to the Co2 generator & the icebox (soon to be iceboxes) and a 1200 GPH MagDrive Pump directing water to the chiller. The Co2 maintains a constant concentration of 1500 parts per million per cubic square foot of Co2 during the day time & shuts off at night. There is also a kill switch attached to the UVB light circuit located outside the grow room so I need not expose myself to excessive UVB. There are circulating fans about to circulate the Co2 - the Can fan also pulls air up from the floor (Co2 is heavy & tends to sink) & jets it up into the air. The light for this area of space is one 1000 Watt Super HPS Solarmax confined in a Magnum xxxl 6" vented hood, flanked on one side by a Procyon and on both sides by a 3 foot UVB bulb which are about 25" - 30" away from the canopy - the UVB only goes on for 5 hours each day. I will be monitoring the effects of the UVB on the foliage to avert possible damages. Both reservoirs for Groups 1 & 2 were changed & a full strength Transitional Expert Recirculating formula of 10 gallons each was added to the reservoir - PH adjusted to be around 5.5 - 5.8 (my PH pen which was supposed to be a replacement for my first defective PH pen has proved to be, well unreliable to say the least & I'm back to the color dropper method). I added a root drench of 1/4 strength SubCulture M to all the plants by pouring the mixture directly onto their roots & into their pots as was suggested by the makers of the product. I'm giving the mycorrhizal fungi a week's head start to establish themselves as the bacteria in SubCulture B can out compete them if added to the system at the same time as the fungi. The SubCulture B will be added next week. Bio balls, 45 in each reservoir have been added to provide access to oxygen & surface area for the beneficial micro-organisms to live on - this will also prevent the beneficial bacteria & fungi from forming a thick, clear slime on the surface of the water which has the potential to clog the sprayers and the pumps. Signs of clogging or over-population will be monitored closely. The plants in Groups 1 & 2, with the mothers being selected, cloned & the clones showing signs of viability, plus the plants getting rather large were put into 12/12 on 10/18/09. Group 1 was 4 months, 3 weeks old (16 weeks & 1 day) at the time of flowering. Group 2 was 2 months, 3 weeks, 5 days old (12 weeks 5 days). Group 1: To deal with height issues, I've applied several techniques: the Group 1 mothers are large and quite thick stemmed - too thick to bend. For now, I'm training the Procyon on them in the hopes the added blue wavelength will retard stretching. As they begin to grow & stretch, I plan on first bending down the side branches and if possible, slowly & incrementally bend/ or very lightly break the main stem to get the plant to grow in a more horizontal fashion. As a last resort - I may have to top them. I'm considering doing it now, but would rather take my chances & hopefully not have to do it. As it stands now, they are about 1 foot away from the glass of the vented hood. The other 2 plants in Group 1 were flexible enough that I was able to bend them nearly to container level. I had not anticipated using LST or other training/ bending methods - so this should be interesting - I'm excited to see what comes of it. Group 2: The plants in Group 2, being younger than the plants in Group 1 were more flexible and bent far easier - with some bending right down to the "ground." The larger, less flexible plants have been tilted horizontally and had their branches tied down. One plant I decided to try a more severe training method on - I bent the meristem until it broke - it did not separate from the plant, it just became pliable, I trained this in the direction I wanted to it go & waited to see if it would survive - low and behold it did! The plant remained in the position I put it in and the top, the area above the break continued to grow and turn up towards the light in 2 days. As the flowering of the plants grown from seed is a secondary grow to the establishment of the perpetual grow system, I'm taking this opportunity to try some things that are challenging. There are still some plants in Group 2 whose sex is undetermined - they will be watched closely & males will obviously be removed quickly. Note - I was told you cannot remove plants from the flower units as their remaining dead roots will cause the remaining plants to die - so far this had not happened. I've removed as much of the roots as possible, but the washing action of the water flow may be removing the remaining dead roots where they are eventually fished out & removed from the reservoir which would explain the lack of problems from the removal of plants. I should also mention here that I've had issues with roots hanging out of the end of the flower chamber - I just hack these off with scissors - the plants don't seem to mind at all. I've done the same thing with roots in the veg units & cloners that have grown too long or wrapped themselves around the sprayer apparatus - as they are long thick taproots & plentiful, the plants do not seem to mind. All in all, this week or phase has a few unknowns and things that could go either way - this should be the beginning of an interesting part of the grow. It doesn't show in my notes - but I am seriously running around excited & happy! |
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#28
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10/18/09 Update of the other units:
Here are some pictures of the plants in Group 3 not in flower. I as able to take 23 clones from them which are now in the flower room to determine sex. 10:18:09Group3RoomRC.jpg10:18:09Group3AeroUnitRC.jpg 10:18:09Group3VegUnitBA_A11_SBY_RC.jpg I've already decided on my Blueberry mom & my Sugar Blossom mom if they do indeed turn out to be females. SugarBlossomMommaRC.jpg 10:18:09SugarBlossomHandRC.jpg The Sugar Blossom is a beautiful, tightly stacked plant with fan leaves larger than my hand! She's a beautiful indica pheno - she's actually a 50/50 indica-sativa mix. She's also a delightful yellow-green with long, strong, plentiful roots like her Blueberry counterpart. Very uniform phenotype, and there were many perfectly good girls to choose from, again - praised be Joey of Joey Weed! BluberryMommaRC.jpg 10:18:09FavoriteBlueberryVerticalRC.jpg 10:18:09BlueberryHandRC.jpg The Blueberry - after all the runts, I had resigned myself to either not getting a mom - there were only 3 passable plants - only 2 which were 'good' and one that turned out to be outstanding. The pictures absolutely do not do her justice. She has dark purple leaves and lovely red-purple stems. Her leaves are large and she exhibits the same tight inter-nodal spacing as the Sugar Blossom girl. There is some bleaching on her top leaves due to her growing so fast & into the T5's, but I'm not terribly concerned about that. I'm working on finding a way to photograph her & capture what's so special about her. Again - good job Joey! Now, these plants have not sexed under the 12/12 yet - they could conceivably be males - although they do have those large bubble swellings were the side branches connect to the main stem - I've heard that is an indicator of female sex, but I don't know if this is reliable. Also, the have very prominent side branching & are short and stocky compared to others whose side branches are nearly nonexistent & exhibit a lankier body. I like these 2 so much, I'm cloning them and putting them under the cloner with the 24 hour lights as soon as I get those first mother clones out of the cloner. I'm excited! On an irrelevant personal note, just looking at them makes me happy - I think they are beautiful and I've become quite fond of them already. What do you all think? Are they little ladies or gents?
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My First Grow: Aeroponics, LED veg, Super HPS flower, CO2 sealed room Grow Journal Discussion Thread Last edited by Apollonia; 10-21-2009 at 03:16 PM.. Reason: Double Pic |
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#29
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10/18/09
My gamble on mycorrhizae This scenario applies to all beneficial organisms I will add and have already added. The Floralicious Plus contains beneficial bacteria and has caused no problems yet, but it is nowhere near as concentrated as SubCulture M or SubCulture B. The SubCulture M & B may prove to be either a nightmare, a blessing or a nothing. Nightmare scenario: the mycorrhizae fungi & the beneficial bacteria explode in numbers clogging my sprayers & possibly clogging my pumps. The Bio balls prove inadequate in containing them and they form a thick slime on the surface of the water in the reservoir. Removing them by cleaning the system proves to be extremely difficult as they are stubborn, microscopic & get into and on every little part of your apparatus. Alternate nightmare scenario: the mycorrhizae & beneficial bacteria don't survive or are too small in number & enemy pathogens collect on the root system harming & possibly killing my plants. Blessing scenario: The mycorrhizae & beneficial bacteria establish themselves on my plants roots, protecting them from enemy pathogens, aid in nutrient uptake which lead to overall better plant health, less use of nutrients & bigger buds w/o over reproducing themselves & sliming my system. They contain themselves to the root system & the bio balls I've provided in the reservoirs. Nothing scenario: The mycorrhizae & beneficial bacteria don't survive and no enemy pathogens take hold. Or the mycorrhizae & bacteria do survive, but are too insignificant in number to substantially effect the health of the plants. Or the beneficials establish themselves just fine, but due to various reasons, perhaps the type of nutrients I'm using or the systems I'm running (aeroponic/NFT & Hydroton in dutch buckets), they provide no observable benefit. Why I chose to do what I did: I decided to inoculate my plant's root system with a root drench of SubCulture M at quarter strength b/c of several reasons. One being I had added a carbohydrate supplement, FloraNectar: Pineapple Rush!, and felt insecure leaving it to chance that the bad bacteria & pathogens could use this as an ideal breeding ground with a plentiful food source. My thinking being that the mycorrhizae would at least protect the plants from harm by establishing themselves before the bad guys had a chance to establish themselves. I chose to do it at quarter strength b/c that was recommended to me by more than one user of mycorrhizal fungi, but in particular a poster by the name of Rocky Mtn Squid, who has used mycorrhizae in his aeroponic system & was kind enough to give me the lowdown on his experience and what to expect. You can always add more, it's more difficult to reduce what's already been added. In addition to all this I thought about my system - many people use highly oxygenated DWC systems which can "super-charge" beneficial organisms causing them to sometimes become more of a hinderance than a help. My thinking is I do not have aerated reservoirs, the oxygen the organisms have available to them comes from 2 primary places - for the beneficial bacteria it's primarily on the bio balls that float on the surface of the reservoir, for the mycorrhizal fungi, it's on the plant roots themselves & in the aerated sprays of water. I'm hoping this relatively limited amount of oxygen access will curb population size to a manageable levels. Finally, if I have this dialed in right there are some pretty strong benefits to having these little guys around I refer you to this study which rather impressed me on the benefits of adding SubCulture to your grow: SubCulture Study So, if ll goes well - this could be a big benefit to my system. If not, I'll clear it out with some FloraShield. |
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#30
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Some of you may have wondered who does that hairy arm holding up my prized Sugar Blossom & Blueberry plants belong to, as it is clearly not of the feminine persuasion. The arm that doesn't match the little white hand you've seen once or twice in my previous pictures. No, it's not my arm (but that is my little hand)! That's my friend, isthisyourhomeworklarry?. So now I think is a great time to introduce him & say a few words about my friend isthisyourhomeworklarry?, whose assistance in times of need has been a key element to the success of this grow.
isthisyourhomeworklarry?'s a man, a man with a van He's also very computer savvy & has hooked me up great by walking me through the installation of this wonderful proxy server, JAP/JonDo, which I highly recommend to everyone for their anonymity & security over the internet - I've persuaded isthisyourhomeworklarry? to put up a tutorial on how to get it up and running & how to use it to access sensitive sites such as these - if you're interested I highly suggest you check it out. The only folks who know about this grow are me, isthisyourhomeworklarry? & my little brother - the two people I've known for at least a decade & the only people in the world I know I can trust with my life or a secret as dangerous as this one. So on that note I'd like to pay special thanks & praise to my old friend: a helpful assistant, an occasional savior, a hard worker, a fascinating conversationalist, a generous soul, a brilliant mind & an all around decent human being - to isthisyourhomeworklarry?! Oh and it goes without saying - isthisyourhomeworklarry? will be given any fruits of this labor that he wishes to have - absolutely gratis & given gladly with my gratitude. |
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