G
Guest
Mornin' Bud!
If your plants are already putting out new growth you did an excellent job repotting them and the roots are taking to the new soil.
Perfect! Don't go by the loks or the feel of the soil. With pots that much deeper it may look like the Sahara desert on top and as far as your finger can reach, but if the pot isn't light the soil is still moist. Cannabis roots tend to grow downwards. Moist soil doesn't allow as much oxygen to reach the roots. Cannabis loves oxygen, so that's why we don't want the soil to be perpetually moist. It'll provoke root rot and stress.
The size of your plants doesn't have anything to do with smell potential...you're learning that pretty quick LOL .
Cannabis will develop an enormous root system given the room! And the health of your plants depends on the health of the roots...you're gonna see some signatures around here which say "Its all in the roots!"...they're right :wink:. Just for the record, healthy cannabis roots are snow-white and plump. I'm sure your roots were healthy when you repotted (I know...there were alot of them! :wink so I hope you took a nice look at them. That's what you should see when you repot your plants. If they're brownish and slimy looking, that's root rot..God forbid! :wink:
What Ms. G was referring to is not getting rid of the root mass You don't want to do that at all Bud! What she was referring to is a method some growers use when the plants get a bit too rootbound before their final repotting, to loosen up the root ball and help the plant root new soil. You basically remove the plant from the old pot, and before repotting kinda dig your fingers into the root mass and very gently loosen it with your fingers before placing the plant in the new soil. Want my advice? Don't try it yet. You still aren't familiar enough with your plants' root system, how it works and how much abuse your plants can take. Loosening the root ball before repotting is potentially very stressful for the plants, if not done correctly :wink:
You weren't screwing up badly Bud, it was a simple matter of learning when to repot. On the contrary, IMO you did an excellent job of trying to compensate your plants' deficiencies. When a plant has to receive nutes and micronutes constantly from you, because it has used up everything in the soil, its not easy at all for anybody to keep them healthy and growing well until they can be repotted, even for experienced gorwers. I deal with this alot because of the small space I have to grow in. Like you, I have to use my pots to the limit before repotting, and every time my plants fill up their pots I usually have a week to 10 days that I have to do some very pro-active prevention to keep them from suffering deficiencies until I can upgrade the pot. You'll learn to recognize these deficiencies (the most common being nitrogen, magnesium and iron, usually the first deficiencies to appear in cannabis) and to treat them, as well as avoid that they appear through preventive use of micronutes and additives. Its pretty easy, so don't worry...we'll get to that in time. Your ladies probably won't be presenting any more notable deficiencies until around maybe a month in flower.
As far as leaving the closet door closed and being absent for a day...I don't know how hot it gets in there with the door closed, but I'm bargaining on VERY hot. Can you give us a temp reading? Close the closet doors some time after the lights have been on and take the reading at the level of your plants at least a half hour after you close the doors - maybe set the thermometer on the edge of the pot and leave it there for a half hour or so.
If its over 85° with the doors closed I'd leave the door cracked! Also, my own very personal tip for you, and you can take it or leave it...is the next time to go with a 18/6 light cycle in veg. Especially if you have temperature issues and no adequate ventilation. All that heat 24/7 does them no good at all. At least in the 6 hours lights off they'll have time to recuperate some.
If you remember something you forgot to ask, no worries...we're here! :smile:
If we don't hear back from ya before Saturday, have a great time this weekend and say hi to your plants for me
If your plants are already putting out new growth you did an excellent job repotting them and the roots are taking to the new soil.
I stuck a finger down in all the pots and the soil feels dry already in two of them, but I'm gonna give it another day or so cuz the pots aren't quite light enuff when I lift them. Geez, they are gulping down the water.
Perfect! Don't go by the loks or the feel of the soil. With pots that much deeper it may look like the Sahara desert on top and as far as your finger can reach, but if the pot isn't light the soil is still moist. Cannabis roots tend to grow downwards. Moist soil doesn't allow as much oxygen to reach the roots. Cannabis loves oxygen, so that's why we don't want the soil to be perpetually moist. It'll provoke root rot and stress.
The size of your plants doesn't have anything to do with smell potential...you're learning that pretty quick LOL .
I never thot about getting rid of some of the root mass during repotting. The roots were all over the place when I repotted this last time. One plant even had roots growing thru the holes in the bottom of the pot. I just figured .. it's a plant. It isn't gonna grow THAT fast. Boy, was I wrong.
Cannabis will develop an enormous root system given the room! And the health of your plants depends on the health of the roots...you're gonna see some signatures around here which say "Its all in the roots!"...they're right :wink:. Just for the record, healthy cannabis roots are snow-white and plump. I'm sure your roots were healthy when you repotted (I know...there were alot of them! :wink so I hope you took a nice look at them. That's what you should see when you repot your plants. If they're brownish and slimy looking, that's root rot..God forbid! :wink:
What Ms. G was referring to is not getting rid of the root mass You don't want to do that at all Bud! What she was referring to is a method some growers use when the plants get a bit too rootbound before their final repotting, to loosen up the root ball and help the plant root new soil. You basically remove the plant from the old pot, and before repotting kinda dig your fingers into the root mass and very gently loosen it with your fingers before placing the plant in the new soil. Want my advice? Don't try it yet. You still aren't familiar enough with your plants' root system, how it works and how much abuse your plants can take. Loosening the root ball before repotting is potentially very stressful for the plants, if not done correctly :wink:
You weren't screwing up badly Bud, it was a simple matter of learning when to repot. On the contrary, IMO you did an excellent job of trying to compensate your plants' deficiencies. When a plant has to receive nutes and micronutes constantly from you, because it has used up everything in the soil, its not easy at all for anybody to keep them healthy and growing well until they can be repotted, even for experienced gorwers. I deal with this alot because of the small space I have to grow in. Like you, I have to use my pots to the limit before repotting, and every time my plants fill up their pots I usually have a week to 10 days that I have to do some very pro-active prevention to keep them from suffering deficiencies until I can upgrade the pot. You'll learn to recognize these deficiencies (the most common being nitrogen, magnesium and iron, usually the first deficiencies to appear in cannabis) and to treat them, as well as avoid that they appear through preventive use of micronutes and additives. Its pretty easy, so don't worry...we'll get to that in time. Your ladies probably won't be presenting any more notable deficiencies until around maybe a month in flower.
As far as leaving the closet door closed and being absent for a day...I don't know how hot it gets in there with the door closed, but I'm bargaining on VERY hot. Can you give us a temp reading? Close the closet doors some time after the lights have been on and take the reading at the level of your plants at least a half hour after you close the doors - maybe set the thermometer on the edge of the pot and leave it there for a half hour or so.
If its over 85° with the doors closed I'd leave the door cracked! Also, my own very personal tip for you, and you can take it or leave it...is the next time to go with a 18/6 light cycle in veg. Especially if you have temperature issues and no adequate ventilation. All that heat 24/7 does them no good at all. At least in the 6 hours lights off they'll have time to recuperate some.
If you remember something you forgot to ask, no worries...we're here! :smile:
If we don't hear back from ya before Saturday, have a great time this weekend and say hi to your plants for me
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