kermit2692
Well-Known Member
^ Something I consider evvvvery time I want to correct someone...and then I can't help myself and just correct them Anyway lol
You ARE a fucking hypocrite. Please STFU.I would LOVE to see a scrog person who kept all their leaves, when you find one, be sure to post it here... Fucking moron. Seriously??? You're going to keep all the leaves on a scrog???.
LOLOLOLOLOLOLolol!!!
i could give a fuck either way what people do to their own plants, as long as THEIR(the person growing) needs are met, what i get tired of is the constant insulting and douchebaggery from both sides in this argument, both of which are completely useless to people like me who are trying to gleen ANY positive information we can from such retards taking part in such a debate.
None of you are offering ANY scientific evidence, just regurgitation of the same useless information, with out the answer ever being determined either way. But i love the way you folks degenerate into name calling and stupidity, every time this debate hits the forum.
the only thing you folks have really accomplished is making adversaries out of each other, over a debate that has no science backing it, and does not have any credible scientists doing legitimate scientific study on this technique.
if you wonder at my own insults, i figured it was neccessary, as it seems to be the best way you folks communicate amongst yourselves.
actually there have been several academic studies posted backing up my statement. how about yours?that would be wrong, the leaves furthest away end up becoming larger than the leaves closest to the light. Meaning the larger leaf has to work harder to keep itself maintained.
Is this guy, in any way, serious about this truly bizarre assertion?@joe mac, you wrote that. - It only stands to reason that the leaves closest to the light source are doing more work than those farther away.
that would be wrong, the leaves furthest away end up becoming larger than the leaves closest to the light. Meaning the larger leaf has to work harder to keep itself maintained.
Here is some help BF, want to learn something??@joe mac, you wrote that. - It only stands to reason that the leaves closest to the light source are doing more work than those farther away.
that would be wrong, the leaves furthest away end up becoming larger than the leaves closest to the light. Meaning the larger leaf has to work harder to keep itself maintained.
Why were my comments snide? I was just pointing out to you that the statement you made and backed up by 40 years of experience, seems to go against what people are actually doing. You could have conceded that point but now you want to dig your heels in like the rest and defend your stance, even though it flies in the face of reality!I am sincerely trying to help the kid out, and have thus far ignored his snarky and snide comments...oh well.
You can lead a horse, but...
I actually agreed with that study you posted joe, you were too busy flaming to notice. That one scientific study however does not disprove the whole idea behind defoliation, it just shows that leaves that are further from the light aren't working to their full potential. Once again I fully agree with that.actually there have been several academic studies posted backing up my statement. how about yours?
citation needed
Wow, I said that I have never used scrog...if I tried it, I would be compelled to use what I have seen that has worked best for me.Why were my comments snide? I was just pointing out to you that the statement you made and backed up by 40 years of experience, seems to go against what people are actually doing. You could have conceded that point but now you want to dig your heels in like the rest and defend your stance, even though it flies in the face of reality!
It's quite a bold statement to make that everyone who is growing using the scrog technique is doing it wrong!!
I've read back through the other discussions that were had on this forum as suggested to me by another member, and the 'no leaves, no grow' mantra is continually repeated throughout. Yet scrogging and lollipopping techniques both remove a substantial amount of leaves and most people report positive results from using these techniques, so how is this possible if leaves have been removed?
Take this tree in my garden:
View attachment 3029512
It appears to be flowering yet there were no leaves on it, and there haven't been any leaves on it for months now! How is that possible if there were no leaves there to grow the flowers in the first place? There are also plenty of trees with no leaves on outside, which will now grow new leaves from nothing.
Mother nature has already figured out a way of producing flowers with a loss of foliage long before humans ever existed and started growing weed at home, so I think that beats your experience hands down.
All people are doing is manipulating the plants natural response, the same as any other technique that is out there. It's not some kind of magic.
Why it's not allowed to be spoken about on this forum is the strange thing!!
ok, so I'll try to state this slowly and with small words. YES it was relevant. The shading caused by upper leaves really has no bearing on the ability of a lower leafs ability to photosynthesize or translocate said sugars...to a point. for gods sake man. Of course if you remove an upper leaf to give lower leaves more light, the lower leaves will work more. DUH!It does not show what would happen to those lower leaves though if leaves that were blocking light out were removed, that would have given the study more relevance to what we are discussing.
I forgot about Mother Nature’s most aggressive and destructive means of defoliating my outdoor plants...demonic hailstorms have ripped my plants up over the years...and the plants never liked it, of this, I can assure you...LOL!.
BTW, except for wicked winds and thunder storm squalls I have NEVER seen Mother Nature take the leaves off of any of my outdoor plants.
Yes I'm comparing them in the same way, and I'm asking you the question about how it works as you're such an expert. I'm not asking why the plant does this i'm asking how it does it, how does that tree blossom with no leaves and also how a cannabis plant grows back so quickly with twice as many leaves after you've stripped most of the leaves off?and as far as your analogy about the redbud tree in your yard....WHAT? you are going to compare the stored energy from a perennial tree to the stored energy in an annual like mj?
this fall if you have any outdoor mj plants. just leave them alone and see how well they do next spring when everything else greens up