This is neat. I was wondering how much more veg time I got outside,,, I got time haha. I think Im going to start allot of babies and do more outside...
That sub basement was what had me over here like AHHHHHHH! If you do end up digging... I would get a board that will cross the room and when you are...
You need to practice popping up with your board in the sand for a long time before you go out. If you can get that one motion pop right to where you...
I get that, as soon as I get past the heart pulses walking down the road to see if my grow is still in tact. I open it up thinking they gonna be huge...
Thinking about it tho, canna do state on their feeding charts that it is not set in stone and it is just a guideline for beginners, I think they want...
Saying that, i thought I had proper fucked the northern lights up last week. It was its second week in there but when making my nutes up I made them...
Don't know how I forgot to mention Mycelium Running - Paul Stamets' book which IMO is a must read for anyone on this planet, especially those concerned with the earth and organics. If you don't own a copy, pick one up right now. Also pick up a copy of Teaming with Microbes by Jeff Lowenfels and Wayne Lewis, and if you're really keen grab a copy of Permaculture: A Designers Manual by Bill Mollison - which is literally my bible. Hope this helps someone out there...
Main-Lining Process...Up Close...(because you asked)........now pay attention....
......the young plant is 7 inches tall working on it's 7th node....it has spent the last 5 days in a 12/12 cycle until she (in this case) threw a tiny female pre-calyx....two nodes are chosen, one (upper) for the "hub", and a second (lower) for clones.....everything else above and below the two chosen nodes is removed leaving this, it is then transplanted into a 2 gal pot to veg.
well, didnt have time to read the ten middle pages of this thread, but...I would like to add my two cents.
So, i've been working in tissue culture for the past two years, and...this is very possible. the things is, fan leaves are (probably) too old to display the type of totipotency (the ability for a single cell to regenerate into a whole new plant) that is needed.