My First Grow

Kush55444

Member
This is my first grow. What does everyone think any tips? The close-up pics are of the last plant. Idk what strain or anything about the seeds I remember it was all gasIMG_20180623_163508.jpg
 

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ChevySwish

Well-Known Member
From the looks of the scenery and description of weather it sounds like you're near me in NorCal it's been 100-110 all week. I'd recommend maybe throwing straw around the base of the plant to retain some moisture in the top layers and keep it from drying out too bad, water real early so she has time to use everything all day, check again after the 5pm sunbath and see how the soil is. It IS a weed, I've seen some plants grow in crazy extremes, harvest reflected but grew nonetheless. Looks good though man, doing great for your first time!
 

socaljoe

Well-Known Member
Yeah I took the pics around 3:30 in the afternoon that's when I shade them from the heat it's bad here
Where I'm at in socal, the sun gets very intense. I'm using a 40%, white shade cloth. My plants get full, filtered sun all day and love it. A 10'x10' piece ran me like $15 shipped on eBay. Definitely a good option in my opinion.
 

Miyagismokes

Well-Known Member
Yeah I took the pics around 3:30 in the afternoon that's when I shade them from the heat it's bad here
Makes sense. Top her, she looks good, but a little tall.
Where I'm at in socal, the sun gets very intense. I'm using a 40%, white shade cloth. My plants get full, filtered sun all day and love it. A 10'x10' piece ran me like $15 shipped on eBay. Definitely a good option in my opinion.
My trick is to plant on the edge of the canopy of a tree. South side, but in a spot that breaks up the midday sun.
The tricky part is to put it in a place that gets basically 100% spring sun, but summer sun is shaded at midday.
 

socaljoe

Well-Known Member
My trick is to plant on the edge of the canopy of a tree. South side, but in a spot that breaks up the midday sun.
The tricky part is to put it in a place that gets basically 100% spring sun, but summer sun is shaded at midday.
The trick to that is having a tree to shade it. :bigjoint:

The way I've got my setup going is I'm using an ez-up frame, replaced the canopy with shade cloth. I'm on a southern exposure, so all the plants get full morning and evening sun, but when the sun is at its most intense, like 12-4 pm, it gets filtered through the shade cloth. Pretty good setup I think, and so far it's working well.
 

Kush55444

Member
Where I'm at in socal, the sun gets very intense. I'm using a 40%, white shade cloth. My plants get full, filtered sun all day and love it. A 10'x10' piece ran me like $15 shipped on eBay. Definitely a good option in my opinion.
I'm just using the trees that are right behind them
Makes sense. Top her, she looks good, but a little tall.

My trick is to plant on the edge of the canopy of a tree. South side, but in a spot that breaks up the midday sun.
The tricky part is to put it in a place that gets basically 100% spring sun, but summer sun is shaded at midday.
I haven't topped ant of them the plant in the last pic
Makes sense. Top her, she looks good, but a little tall.

My trick is to plant on the edge of the canopy of a tree. South side, but in a spot that breaks up the midday sun.
The tricky part is to put it in a place that gets basically 100% spring sun, but summer sun is shaded at midday.
I want to top them I think one is autoflower and I starting to bud and I don't want to screw anything up trying to top them
 

Dmannn

Well-Known Member
I do it because it minimizes heat stress.
What are some of the highest temps there?

Its about 103 and 30% humidity. At around sea level. Flat, no mountains.

I have noticed that the plants love the heat as long as the roots don't get too hot. the 100 al pots seems to keep the root temps stable. The felt pots i use are tan. We had some garden variety plants in our front yard but the afternoon sun was baking the containers. The evenings do cool off to about 60s for now.
 

Miyagismokes

Well-Known Member
the 100 al pots seems to keep the root temps stable
I seem to be dealing (this year) with a particularly sensitive to heat strain, but these pics should serve as a primer as to why I do what I do...
First pic is a well rooted clone top. Note the leaf burned into a claw.IMG_20180624_175746761_noexif-1224x1632.jpg
Sure, small black pot on a white surface, it was bound to get burnt, right? Maybe.
Enter item two-- same strain, the clone was the top of this plant.IMG_20180624_175859649_noexif-1224x1632.jpg
Higher leaves heat stressed, the top (leaning right) looks like it's being devoured by russets, to me. But it isn't, it's sunburnt.
All today's damage.
Currently in a 100 gal tan smart pot.

I'm in the mountains, the higher the altitude the worse the UV.
 

ChevySwish

Well-Known Member
The trick to that is having a tree to shade it. :bigjoint:

The way I've got my setup going is I'm using an ez-up frame, replaced the canopy with shade cloth. I'm on a southern exposure, so all the plants get full morning and evening sun, but when the sun is at its most intense, like 12-4 pm, it gets filtered through the shade cloth. Pretty good setup I think, and so far it's working well.
I have the exact same layout and was thinking of doing this, thank you I think you were the last bit of convincing I needed (I'm stubborn)
 

socaljoe

Well-Known Member
I think so, I'm battling taco leaves with almost underwatered soil because the heat and humidity up here this year.
I should've mentioned this before...I got my shade cloth on eBay from a seller called smartshade8. Pretty reasonable price-wise and a lot of options regarding size. I went with white at 40%, but I just bought another 10'x10' piece of 30% white.
 
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