It isn't.I guess going round is more organic lol. I don´t see why a square pot is beter than a round one
fe;n17876250Die Wurzeln neigen dazu said:das erweckt den Eindruck, dass unsere Anlage ziemlich dumm ist. aber es ist nicht. denn das ist einfach falsch. die wurzeln unserer pflanzen suchen gezielt nach wasser und auch nach nährstoffen.
Nur deshalb können unsere Pflanzen sehr flexibel auf schwankende Nährstoffzufuhr reagieren. sie wachsen nicht zufällig, sondern gezielt nach Ihren Bedürfnissen. der Wurzelschnitt durch Luft und Licht in Stofftöpfen und Airpots, sowie die Ecken des quadratischen Topfes, die die gleiche Wirkung haben, beschleunigen diesen Vorgang nur ... um schneller blühen zu können.
klick
We are not growing stems?
I can do a bar in 1 Liter, but commercially 10 gallon in your space should be doing 3 bars as a baseline 'acceptable' yield. So with your 40 gallons, what are you pulling?
I thought using too much was wasteful. I'm leaning much more towards recycling.
How about a thread on the subject. Rather than derail this one
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@Amynamous , have you ever grown Bubble Chum Gum (auto), by any chance? I´ve had my eye on that for a long time
das erweckt den Eindruck, dass unsere Anlage ziemlich dumm ist. aber es ist nicht. denn das ist einfach falsch. die wurzeln unserer pflanzen suchen gezielt nach wasser und auch nach nährstoffen.
Nur deshalb können unsere Pflanzen sehr flexibel auf schwankende Nährstoffzufuhr reagieren. sie wachsen nicht zufällig, sondern gezielt nach Ihren Bedürfnissen. der Wurzelschnitt durch Luft und Licht in Stofftöpfen und Airpots, sowie die Ecken des quadratischen Topfes, die die gleiche Wirkung haben, beschleunigen diesen Vorgang nur ... um schneller blühen zu können.
klick
Nursery grown tree's have been known to fall over, many years after planting in the ground. These trees have often doubled in size before they fall. The reason is they didn't root out of that shape. They learn that circling works as a sapling, then carry on into later life. Air pruning stops this. Traditionally the root ball would of been chopped and pulled apart at planting, but such arts are often lost.
I have not, but it sounds interesting. Who makes it?
Yup!
3 types of roots:
- tap - anchors the tree. They can be quite substantial depending on species
- lateral - supports the tree laterally
[*]capillaries - fine feeder roots that feed the tree
Nursery grown tree's have been known to fall over, many years after planting in the ground. These trees have often doubled in size before they fall. The reason is they didn't root out of that shape. They learn that circling works as a sapling, then carry on into later life. Air pruning stops this. Traditionally the root ball would of been chopped and pulled apart at planting, but such arts are often lost.
well, what would you like to talk about?
Outdoor or indoor ... over trees or therophytes?
Please do not conclude from your example that this has to be the case with all plants. No, even with trees in tree nurseries, this is rather a rarity, while most other trees have a completely healthy root system. one that specifically searches for water and nutrients.
That's my statement .. yours is that cannabis roots grow randomly in the bottom of the pot.
but look at the roots in pots where the plant was kept too wet. you will see that most of the root activity takes place in the or half of the pot. because oxygen is also one of the nutrients and is rarely found in the permanently wet pot floor.
When u look at the big multi pound plants they grow in ~1 foot deep fabric pots. Iirc u don't need more than a foot depth for the root system.
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