VACAVILLE,CA.GROWER
Well-Known Member
I will be using smart pots on this indoor grow. I was wanting to know if you water till you get runoff in smart pots or do you water alittle less.
I'm doing my first grow and decided to use air pots. THEY DRY OUT SO DAMN FAST. Loving the growth thoughI water the same as I used to water in plastic containers, on average I go 1L of water (~quart) per 1Gal of soil/medium. Only thing to watch for with these pots is they'll tend to dry out faster than you're accustomed to as air actually passes through them. Not a bad thing, they work fantastic, just an adjustment. Cheers.
Yeah, you definitely have to water more but I think you'll find it worthwhile in output. I find pretty well any container size dries consistently around 3 days once they're into flowering, some a bit faster, rarely slower. Here's an example of 3x 5gal plants that will finish this week, they're looking close to a qp eachI'm doing my first grow and decided to use air pots. THEY DRY OUT SO DAMN FAST. Loving the growth though
Good point senile. When they're really dry if you don't water in steps or very slowly you'll end up with some water running straight through. I've found making sure there aren't any air pockets/gaps helps there too, when I up-pot I pack the edges (lightly) to fill any gaps. Wouldn't go back to plastic though, these things rock for building strong root systems.But yeah, these pots definitely dry out faster, so watch out for dry spots and make sure your runoff isn't actually running straight off in channels and missing your soil completely. Its better to water slowly, or in steps.
I like to make the top at bit concave, so that water runs into the soil instead of to the edges and down the sides.Good point senile. When they're really dry if you don't water in steps or very slowly you'll end up with some water running straight through. I've found making sure there aren't any air pockets/gaps helps there too, when I up-pot I pack the edges (lightly) to fill any gaps. Wouldn't go back to plastic though, these things rock for building strong root systems.
That dip towards the center helps, mine tend to go that way as well, likely due to the medium, 50% Pro-Mix/50% triple mix. I find the root balls depend on how far you push the plant size vs. pot, like if I grow out a 2.5 - 3 oz plant in a 3 gal pot, by the time I remove the root ball it's just a solid mass, although you're right, not a ton of roots right at the edge, they're more evenly spread top to bottom and side to side. Last summer I grew some monsters in 7 gal outdoor, they were about 1 sq metre each and they were just solid roots, almost nothing but roots left at the end.I like to make the top at bit concave, so that water runs into the soil instead of to the edges and down the sides.
Also, when dissecting rootballs, I noticed that there literally weren't any roots at the edges, it was actually a ball of roots contained in the center of the pot. If you have the pot on a drain pan the roots will touch bottom, if you have the pot elevated for air circulation around the roots will literally be in a ball in the center. So when I water I water near the stem, and try to keep that root mass with water in it.
LOL I take a lot of care with my soil, but I built and mixed it myself, and in organics you truly are watering and feeding the soil, and the plant's relationship with the soil is getting it with what it needs. The plants make their own food via the light hitting leaves, and I just water the soil
I defer to you in that regard, I have yet to grow larger plants in the smartpots.That dip towards the center helps, mine tend to go that way as well, likely due to the medium, 50% Pro-Mix/50% triple mix. I find the root balls depend on how far you push the plant size vs. pot, like if I grow out a 2.5 - 3 oz plant in a 3 gal pot, by the time I remove the root ball it's just a solid mass, although you're right, not a ton of roots right at the edge, they're more evenly spread top to bottom and side to side. Last summer I grew some monsters in 7 gal outdoor, they were about 1 sq metre each and they were just solid roots, almost nothing but roots left at the end.
Sorry to thread hijack, but I feel it's relevant.Yeah, you definitely have to water more but I think you'll find it worthwhile in output. I find pretty well any container size dries consistently around 3 days once they're into flowering, some a bit faster, rarely slower. Here's an example of 3x 5gal plants that will finish this week, they're looking close to a qp each
View attachment 3364293
Oh yeah, I find them easier, typically go party cup to 1 gal, then to 3 gal, then 5 or 7 gal, I let them go as large as possible in each container before up-potting to the next.Have you figured out how to transplant out of them yet? I'm thinking it might be worth it just to use solid pots for the small plants and transplant into the finishing smart pot. I'm comparing 2.75L solid square pots and similar sized smart pots now to see which is better.
Sorry missed your questions earlier, those are vegged 8 weeks out of a party cup, maybe an extra few days waiting for the room. I've found a huge difference between 5-6 and 8 weeks veg. When you think about it an extra 2 weeks in a 14 vs. 16 week total cycle isn't much but can make a huge difference. These are in a custom built room 4x9.5x7', I run 2x 3x3's with 2x LEC Sun Systems 315w CMH, they each cover a 3x3 really well. use the 50% Pro-Mix/50% triple-mix, supplemental feeds using just the base AN A&B bloom @600 ppm through flowering. Switched to the mix about a year ago and the lights last summer and quite happy with the results Cheers.Sorry to thread hijack, but I feel it's relevant.
How long did you veg? Nutes? Strain? Light? Tent size?
I'm truly amazed