HASH BOMB. 250w HPS DWC

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
Ok maybe its the picture looking tight. I saw the under growth is cleared for good ventilation. I hope that is just an illustion that the space is all taken up. 8)
Yeah theres still another 8 inch round the sides, and to the front, the back is pretty much full but should be able to weave that round. Ive cleared a lot of growth from underneith aswell since I have taken this photo, and expect I'll be clearing a lot more over the next week or two! :p
 

9leaves

Well-Known Member
Yeah theres still another 8 inch round the sides, and to the front, the back is pretty much full but should be able to weave that round. Ive cleared a lot of growth from underneith aswell since I have taken this photo, and expect I'll be clearing a lot more over the next week or two! :p
I just got powder mildew on a few leaves on my last grow. Just wanted to make sure you don't get it. I just cut the leaves off that had it. That controled it. I now have more fans to blow things around harder. That PM is just a pisser.
 

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
I just got powder mildew on a few leaves on my last grow. Just wanted to make sure you don't get it. I just cut the leaves off that had it. That controled it. I now have more fans to blow things around harder. That PM is just a pisser.
Hopefully I never have the pleasure of dealing with it! What caused that? Was it because the canopy was so crowded and not enough air movement? I normally go to town with the defoliation 3 weeks after the flip to get more light to the bud sites, lower the relative humidity and get good air circulation.
 

mattyblade1

Well-Known Member
A bit of Coco info you may find useful

Background on Coco

The recent shift to Coco as a medium for growers has caused many to turn and take a look. Since Coco can be used in virtually any style of growing (ie. Container Growing, Ebb and Flow, DWC and even Aeroponics) and wide spread reports of increased growth rates as a result of it's use, it certainly merits a closer look.

Coco and it's various grades are manufactured from the shells and husks of the Coconut. While Coco is made in several parts of the world, Sri Lanka is by far and away the world leader inCoco production. For obvious reasons, it is cheaper to produce the Coco in Sri Lanka as labor is cheap and Coconuts are quite abundant as Coconut export is one of Sri Lanka's top export products.

Coco products have many uses other than it's Horticultural applications. As an example, Coco husks (the larger pieces) are used to mix in with unstable earth to help anchor it and allow water to easily pass through thereby controlling erosion in mountainous areas of the world. Coco is also used to filter drinking water in some parts of the world that can't afford the high cost of water treatment plants.

Coco in Gardening

In indoor gardening, Coco and it's various grades offer indoor growers (Newbies and Seasoned Growers alike) a super forgiving medium that practically insures that over-watering and "dampening off" never occur. In Hydro, Cocoallows the gardener to cycle/flood less frequently as the Coco itself, unlike Hydroton, will retain the perfect amount of moisture to keep the plants happy between floods. Depending on the grade of Coco used, if you're flooding four or five times per light cycle, you can easily cut down to two to three floods during "lights on" and NONE during the dark period. Less floodings = less nutrients used = big savings on nutrients!

Being a totally inert (no food value) substrate,supplemental feedings through a good, well rounded nutrient regime are essential. However, this is the beauty of Coco as since it is inert, youcan more accurately control EXACTLY how much food your plants are receiving. Also, by just looking at your plants, you'll be able to see if they are wanting more food or less and you can veryprecisely contol the feedings by monitoring the PPM or EC of your feedings. Coco allows the grower to have a "gas pedal" and a "brake" for the plant growth. Through trial and experimentation, you will quickly find that precise level that your plants perform best at and learn to keep it there for pronounced growth!

Something should also be said about the "symbiotic" relationship that Coco enjoys with plants. When doing a side by side comparion withplants grown in Coco versus the same plants grown in Soil (or Coco vs Hydroton in Hydro), it becomes apparently very quickly to the grower that the rate of growth is EXPLOSIVE in Coco!It's not at all unusual to see the same cuttings in Coco be twice the size of cuttings in soil. The plants have an overall healthier, happier look to them and the hybrid vigour of a given strain is accentuated when in Coco. The tastes and aromas of buds grown in Coco are extremely difficult to tell from herb grown in a totally organic soil and are ALWAYS more flavorful and aromatic in Hydro when compared to Hydroton grown bud.The plants just seem to give their best in Coco and with less hassle than either soil or Hydrton.

When it comes to the problems of seriously vasilating pH in Hydro when Hydroton is used, you can kiss those problems goodbye when you convert to Coco as your medium. Once thoroughly flushed and buffered with pH'd water, Coco will prove to be rock solid when it comes to staying in the proper pH range. This reason alone makes Coco worth converting to in Hydroponics, IMHO.

Aside from training your brain to pH at hydroponic levels, Coco growers must adapt to a "Water to Waste" approach to watering/feeding when container growing. This means to continue watering well after runoff water comes out of the bottom. This is because Coco retains just enough moisture to sustain the plant but, like Hydroponics, it requires a good long drink to keep the plants happy. This also acts as an effective"flushing" method to keep salts (nutrients) from building up in the medium. Although you need to feed much more frequently than a pre-ferted soil mix, it is still recommended that you do a periodic plain pH'd watering to assist in ridding any built up salts in the medium. For this reason, Watering to Waste requires some sort of "catch" system to capture the run off water out of your pots whencontainer garden. An Ebb n Flow tray works well or you can fabricate your own catch try to place under your pots. If elevated, this catch tray can have a drain in one corner or at the center to allow the run off to drip into a Rubbermaid containerbelow the catch tray.
 

9leaves

Well-Known Member
Hopefully I never have the pleasure of dealing with it! What caused that? Was it because the canopy was so crowded and not enough air movement? I normally go to town with the defoliation 3 weeks after the flip to get more light to the bud sites, lower the relative humidity and get good air circulation.
I thought one fan was moving enough air. I was starting to hear the fans downstairs so I put one on low. Thinking about it. My neighborhood always smells good. I just get paranoid about it. Even though in eitier direction I can smell some top shelf bud blazin'. Its the same when I spark up. But when you aren't smoking everything sounds loud about the grow room. Grow room. Ha. Its a small closet. My anxiety plays into a nice paranoid me.
 

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
Would agree. You can get away with 2 or 3 days. How long are you away at any one time?
If I'm working away I always make sure I'm back at weekends, and I just leave a bucket of nutes mixed up, and a friend pops round and just tops up to a line ive drawn in marker pen. They don't know anything about cannabis so I just keep it simple for them.
 

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
I thought one fan was moving enough air. I was starting to hear the fans downstairs so I put one on low. Thinking about it. My neighborhood always smells good. I just get paranoid about it. Even though in eitier direction I can smell some top shelf bud blazin'. Its the same when I spark up. But when you aren't smoking everything sounds loud about the grow room. Grow room. Ha. Its a small closet. My anxiety plays into a nice paranoid me.
Yeah I always run 2 fans during flower, only 9 inch ones. Im thinking of buying one of those slim oscillating fans, they had them on offer at the grow shop but sold out very quickly, Amazon will have them no doubt!
What ya growing and whats your set-up?
 

calliandra

Well-Known Member
My goodness, she really is exploding! Trying to get noticed, perhaps? :mrgreen:
I really like how the buds have some breathing space between them - looks relaxed as compared to the crampitycramp I have on mine!
Can you take a sideview too sometime? I'd love to have a look under her scroggy skirts :P

and wow @mattyblade1 - thanks for all that coco info in one spot!
It does sound very tempting as far as the advantages go -- but all that watering wouldn't suit me either :shock: lol
I do prefer coco in my soil over peat though, mainly because peat is non-renewable though it's sourced closer.
And what applies to pure coco thus also applies to my setup, if in limited ways ;)
So did I understand correctly that coco is PH-neutral?
 

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
My goodness, she really is exploding! Trying to get noticed, perhaps? :mrgreen:
I really like how the buds have some breathing space between them - looks relaxed as compared to the crampitycramp I have on mine!
Can you take a sideview too sometime? I'd love to have a look under her scroggy skirts :P

and wow @mattyblade1 - thanks for all that coco info in one spot!
It does sound very tempting as far as the advantages go -- but all that watering wouldn't suit me either :shock: lol
I do prefer coco in my soil over peat though, mainly because peat is non-renewable though it's sourced closer.
And what applies to pure coco thus also applies to my setup, if in limited ways ;)
So did I understand correctly that coco is PH-neutral?
.
Thank you, shes definitely getting there! And I shall take some photos just for you later on when she wakes up, which will be in the next couple of hours! :grin:
 

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
My goodness, she really is exploding! Trying to get noticed, perhaps? :mrgreen:
I really like how the buds have some breathing space between them - looks relaxed as compared to the crampitycramp I have on mine!
Can you take a sideview too sometime? I'd love to have a look under her scroggy skirts :P

and wow @mattyblade1 - thanks for all that coco info in one spot!
It does sound very tempting as far as the advantages go -- but all that watering wouldn't suit me either :shock: lol
I do prefer coco in my soil over peat though, mainly because peat is non-renewable though it's sourced closer.
And what applies to pure coco thus also applies to my setup, if in limited ways ;)
So did I understand correctly that coco is PH-neutral?
image.jpeg
 

mattyblade1

Well-Known Member
My goodness, she really is exploding! Trying to get noticed, perhaps? :mrgreen:
I really like how the buds have some breathing space between them - looks relaxed as compared to the crampitycramp I have on mine!
Can you take a sideview too sometime? I'd love to have a look under her scroggy skirts :P

and wow @mattyblade1 - thanks for all that coco info in one spot!
It does sound very tempting as far as the advantages go -- but all that watering wouldn't suit me either :shock: lol
I do prefer coco in my soil over peat though, mainly because peat is non-renewable though it's sourced closer.
And what applies to pure coco thus also applies to my setup, if in limited ways ;)
So did I understand correctly that coco is PH-neutral?
Yes my man you did.
 

TheStickMan

Well-Known Member
Needs some work on the left hand side, but thats the area that would have been filled had I not snapped the branch like a nob head!
 
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