G
Guest
In my various trials it's become obvious that seed starts in smaller containers completely lag behind starts in larger containers, to the point that my delayed awareness + transplant shock makes starting in small pots completely counter productive if not disastrous.
This goes against everything I've read, where most growers seem to intentionally bind their roots. My roots never look that impressive at transplant, and I've seen [coco coir] growers keep plants in solo cups so long that they actually push themselves out of the cup. I'm not in coco and not feeding liquids or watering twice a day, but I can't fathom the situations being that different from each other.
My background is outdoor in-ground (free range rhizo) growing, and I'm currently trying to figure out how to grow coco sized plants in realistic sized containers, and I'm wondering if I'm actually waiting too long to transplant. I don't know any indoor growers and only have online photos to go by, which always deceive me. So far, the only problem I have starting in large pots is that I sometimes loose the seed. Since soaking the entire medium instead of keeping a wet spot, I've not had that problem.
So my question is, is transplanting really beneficial in organic soil, and can someone show me examples of when to transplant? All my plants started in large pots (1 to 10 gallon) maintain coteyledons while all my starts in solo cups lose them and the single blade fans very quickly. So, am I waiting too long to transplant and completely stunting my plants waiting for them to shoot massive roots out the drain holes? My roots reach the bottom fairly quickly, but they never try to escape or push the plant out of the cup [like I've seen in coco/chemical grows].
Thanks for any input, Bholocaust
This goes against everything I've read, where most growers seem to intentionally bind their roots. My roots never look that impressive at transplant, and I've seen [coco coir] growers keep plants in solo cups so long that they actually push themselves out of the cup. I'm not in coco and not feeding liquids or watering twice a day, but I can't fathom the situations being that different from each other.
My background is outdoor in-ground (free range rhizo) growing, and I'm currently trying to figure out how to grow coco sized plants in realistic sized containers, and I'm wondering if I'm actually waiting too long to transplant. I don't know any indoor growers and only have online photos to go by, which always deceive me. So far, the only problem I have starting in large pots is that I sometimes loose the seed. Since soaking the entire medium instead of keeping a wet spot, I've not had that problem.
So my question is, is transplanting really beneficial in organic soil, and can someone show me examples of when to transplant? All my plants started in large pots (1 to 10 gallon) maintain coteyledons while all my starts in solo cups lose them and the single blade fans very quickly. So, am I waiting too long to transplant and completely stunting my plants waiting for them to shoot massive roots out the drain holes? My roots reach the bottom fairly quickly, but they never try to escape or push the plant out of the cup [like I've seen in coco/chemical grows].
Thanks for any input, Bholocaust