Week 4, day 1 of flower....buds too small??

Status
Not open for further replies.
Able to gain any climate desired...I can seal and vent as well
Replying to my own. Hit send before I finished, apologies...I'm able to hit any desired climates, do you know a nice temp and rh I could shoot for if I introduced correctly?? Been growing for a little less than 5 years. But have never played with carbon dioxide...always wanted to...already dicked this plant up. So it I thought I couldn't hurt if used correctly, thanks friend
 
. Hit send before I finished, apologies...I'm able to hit any desired climates, do you know a nice temp and rh I could shoot for if I introduced correctly?? Been growing for a little less than 5 years. But have never played with carbon dioxide...always wanted to...already dicked this plant up. So it I thought I couldn't hurt if used correctly, thanks friend
 

green_machine_two9er

Well-Known Member
Replying to my own. Hit send before I finished, apologies...I'm able to hit any desired climates, do you know a nice temp and rh I could shoot for if I introduced correctly?? Been growing for a little less than 5 years. But have never played with carbon dioxide...always wanted to...already dicked this plant up. So it I thought I couldn't hurt if used correctly, thanks friend
“in the most respectful way to say this possible”……….. keep it simple dude!!! Your way overthinking and over loving and over vegging and over pruning and everything. Start at the basics and work back up from there. No offense intending but what you got going on here is not gunna really recover.

start over next round. Do you have access to good soils? Or hydro shops? Promix??

You be better off mixing promix with dry amendments and castings and never ph adjusting your plain water

keep veg cycle short. Plant is probably completely rootbound after 4 months of vegs. That’s crazy a 4 month veg plant should be larger than a meter cubed.

don’t add co2 it will literally do absolutely nothing for you.

i could go on but honestly from a lot of your responses it seems your pretty set in your practices so unless your open to setting some older habits aside that don’t serve you I don’t think you’ll see full plant potential.

start with the basics.
Learn what environment is best for LED growing.

get highly fortified soil and castings with dry amendments and just water, go back to the basics basically is what I’m getting at.
 

Tolerance Break

Well-Known Member
“in the most respectful way to say this possible”……….. keep it simple dude!!! Your way overthinking and over loving and over vegging and over pruning and everything. Start at the basics and work back up from there. No offense intending but what you got going on here is not gunna really recover.

start over next round. Do you have access to good soils? Or hydro shops? Promix??

You be better off mixing promix with dry amendments and castings and never ph adjusting your plain water

keep veg cycle short. Plant is probably completely rootbound after 4 months of vegs. That’s crazy a 4 month veg plant should be larger than a meter cubed.

don’t add co2 it will literally do absolutely nothing for you.

i could go on but honestly from a lot of your responses it seems your pretty set in your practices so unless your open to setting some older habits aside that don’t serve you I don’t think you’ll see full plant potential.

start with the basics.
Learn what environment is best for LED growing.

get highly fortified soil and castings with dry amendments and just water, go back to the basics basically is what I’m getting at.
It's always odd to see people asking for help while insisting they know what they're doing when people offer advice.
 

ooof-da

Well-Known Member
ya I think it’s easy to get really worked up about growing weed when in reality it’s just a plant. but to get to the level of some people on these forums can be intimidating & takes a lot of knowledge because for whatever reason there is a big difference in the fine tuning of cannabis VS other garden plants. Sometimes I need to step back and just tell myself “okay this is actually just a tomato plant so what would I do if I wanted to grow a tomato plant” and remember I am not growing tomatoes for anyone but me. Journals are powerful tools for improvement but agree with above you gotta start with the basics and then add complexity once you got the basics down pat…
 
“in the most respectful way to say this possible”……….. keep it simple dude!!! Your way overthinking and over loving and over vegging and over pruning and everything. Start at the basics and work back up from there. No offense intending but what you got going on here is not gunna really recover.

start over next round. Do you have access to good soils? Or hydro shops? Promix??

You be better off mixing promix with dry amendments and castings and never ph adjusting your plain water

keep veg cycle short. Plant is probably completely rootbound after 4 months of vegs. That’s crazy a 4 month veg plant should be larger than a meter cubed.

don’t add co2 it will literally do absolutely nothing for you.

i could go on but honestly from a lot of your responses it seems your pretty set in your practices so unless your open to setting some older habits aside that don’t serve you I don’t think you’ll see full plant potential.

start with the basics.
Learn what environment is best for LED growing.

get highly fortified soil and castings with dry amendments and just water, go back to the basics basically is what I’m getting at.
This one wasn't a 4 month, I said I can fill a tent with 2...I don't get rootbound with a 5 gallon...but yes, keeping it simple helps
 
It's always odd to see people asking for help while insisting they know what they're doing when people offer advice.
I asked for help, and never insisted I know everything...I quoted what I've known. Then compared...yall are too much man...I'll be fine. I never should have even posted in the first place, yall take it easy, ain't my first road trip, but everyone here is an expert I see...when 8m being called the one trying to be an expert after asking for a little advice...I'll be going now. And I'll delete my thread if able so I'm not bothering anyone else, what a mess this was
 

Tolerance Break

Well-Known Member
I asked for help, and never insisted I know everything...I quoted what I've known. Then compared...yall are too much man...I'll be fine. I never should have even posted in the first place, yall take it easy, ain't my first road trip, but everyone here is an expert I see...when 8m being called the one trying to be an expert after asking for a little advice...I'll be going now. And I'll delete my thread if able so I'm not bothering anyone else, what a mess this was
Criticism isnt always personal. You dont have to prove anything to anyone, sometimes it's better to just move on than address every single suggestion.
 

tstick

Well-Known Member
SHEESH! Well, anyway...I think the plants will do okay if you just let them recover. The stalk looks nice and thick....I dunno...I think the plant could still yield some decent buds. People will say to not check the runoff....but I do it all the time. It certainly doesn't hurt anything. Soil is supposed to have buffers and all that...but most "soil" isn't really soil at all. Fox Farm, Roots Organic and others like them are soil-LESS mixes. So, after the initial nutes are depleted (after about a month), you essentially end up in a quasi-hydroponic situation, anyway because all the components are inert, e.g. perlite, peat moss, coco, vermiculite, etc....You have to regulate everything that goes in the same way as you would do with hydro....nutrients AND pH. So, checking the runoff regularly is a good thing. I know this from my own experience on my last grow when my plants started to look really sick....If I hadn't checked the runoff, then I'd have never figured out the problem was from the soil(less) pH being way too low and causing nutrient lockout.

Maybe true soil (the kind that has worms and compost and microbes and all that stuff) has all these magical buffering abilities....but I don't think that necessarily applies to soil-LESS mixes. And, from reading through several threads, here, I get the sense that many of the "soil" problems could be solved more easily by allowing a LOT more runoff when watering and also by monitoring the incoming pH against the runoff.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top