TheStickMan
Well-Known Member
Hey up Calli, how are the girls doing?
Actually, not sure on the smell theory - it's something @RM3 has been proposing - apparently his plants never smell at all in his very well dialed in environment, no matter the strain. It came to my mind when observing how the smell changed when I made changes.I'm also curious, you mentioned a theory that plants put off a smell when stressed. I've noticed these are the smelliest plants I've ever had in veg. They seem happy and the smell is good (like you walk in the house and want whatever that smell is good) but I have never experienced a smell this strong before flower.
Haha, thanks for asking!Hey up Calli, how are the girls doing?
ThanksGood call on the bacteria and nematodes. The bacteria alone were enough for me those gnats will be gone in no time! The ladies look great but to be honest I don't think mold is going to be a problem, most of your swell is going to happen later on in the last few weeks when the ripening occurs. Good luck, the girls look amazing!
Thank you! Do post an update of yours -- it must be exploding to the nth degree with those 400W!Wow, looking excellent! Mine seems really cramped and I'm also slightly worried about the colas being too close together and touching! I think you'll be fine though, you've got great spacing between them!
Very nice! A textbook grow.Actually, not sure on the smell theory - it's something @RM3 has been proposing - apparently his plants never smell at all in his very well dialed in environment, no matter the strain. It came to my mind when observing how the smell changed when I made changes.
Another theory of mine is that maybe they were taking on the smell of the neem meal I was adding more liberally during veg to ward off those gnats...
As to smell intensity, I grew 3 sensi superskunk autos before this one and they were skunky as hell from their 2nd tier of leaves lol - so the nl5xhaze is an innocent angel in comparison to me personally
Haha, thanks for asking!
They are in
day 21 of flower
today and looking good and scary too
View attachment 3577134
View attachment 3577135
The canopy continues at 20cm with the shorter branches that are around 10cm still gaining a very little in height, and the budsites are beginning to fill out a bit in places -- and that's the scary part, if they just fill out and get fat from here - they DO have another 2 months to go! - they are going to be rubbing shoulders with another -- potential danger of mold? We'll see! I've moved my fan to above the screen in any case and will be letting it run more often than I have been to now.
Bit of an impression of how the buds are developing on dawn and dusk respectively:
View attachment 3577136 View attachment 3577137
(yes, I need to find a better way to take pics haha)
I've found that Dusk is actually the one with the more grapey aroma, whilst Dawn is going more citrus-piney
I found Dawn throwing a few leaves in the undergrowth two days ago too; they had just wilted, as in shriveled up without changing color. As the marigold was hanging about too, it may just be that I should water them more... though the 3 day rhythm - watering them until runoff becomes visible (and then gets sucked back up within an hour) - I've gotten into felt just right to now. Observation mode for a bit more on that
I'm also still on the fence about removing the mulch. Been reading around and realizing the obvious: fungus gnats prefer eating fungi (duh? lol) and I have a nice fungus culture under that mulch, so whilst tending to the soil I'm actually also feeding them
I can't wait till those nematodes and bacteria arrive this week! It will be the perfect time to add them, as the adults seem to be dying off, and if they laid eggs those will just be hatching into their larval stage when I introduce their new room mates
Btw found a nice doc on their life cycle here: http://www.greenhouse.cornell.edu/pests/pdfs/insects/FG.pdf
Cheers!
Thanks! I wish it felt that way too - feels like a bumpy ride instead - but hey, there'S fun in that too!Very nice! A textbook grow.
Yes sirHey wait a sec - you said these plants have another 2 months to go?This at Day 21 of flowering and looking like they do?
Every grow is a learning experience.Some require more learning than others! That's what is so great. Working with the plants together.Thanks! I wish it felt that way too - feels like a bumpy ride instead - but hey, there'S fun in that too!
Yes sir
3 days germinating paper towel
7 days sprouting
40 days veg
14 days post-flip stretch
21 days flower (counting from appearance of first flowers)
And Sensi puts flowering time at 65-75 days
That girl looks like the business mate. Keep the pics and updates comingActually, not sure on the smell theory - it's something @RM3 has been proposing - apparently his plants never smell at all in his very well dialed in environment, no matter the strain. It came to my mind when observing how the smell changed when I made changes.
Another theory of mine is that maybe they were taking on the smell of the neem meal I was adding more liberally during veg to ward off those gnats...
As to smell intensity, I grew 3 sensi superskunk autos before this one and they were skunky as hell from their 2nd tier of leaves lol - so the nl5xhaze is an innocent angel in comparison to me personally
Haha, thanks for asking!
They are in
day 21 of flower
today and looking good and scary too
View attachment 3577134
View attachment 3577135
The canopy continues at 20cm with the shorter branches that are around 10cm still gaining a very little in height, and the budsites are beginning to fill out a bit in places -- and that's the scary part, if they just fill out and get fat from here - they DO have another 2 months to go! - they are going to be rubbing shoulders with another -- potential danger of mold? We'll see! I've moved my fan to above the screen in any case and will be letting it run more often than I have been to now.
Bit of an impression of how the buds are developing on dawn and dusk respectively:
View attachment 3577136 View attachment 3577137
(yes, I need to find a better way to take pics haha)
I've found that Dusk is actually the one with the more grapey aroma, whilst Dawn is going more citrus-piney
I found Dawn throwing a few leaves in the undergrowth two days ago too; they had just wilted, as in shriveled up without changing color. As the marigold was hanging about too, it may just be that I should water them more... though the 3 day rhythm - watering them until runoff becomes visible (and then gets sucked back up within an hour) - I've gotten into felt just right to now. Observation mode for a bit more on that
I'm also still on the fence about removing the mulch. Been reading around and realizing the obvious: fungus gnats prefer eating fungi (duh? lol) and I have a nice fungus culture under that mulch, so whilst tending to the soil I'm actually also feeding them
I can't wait till those nematodes and bacteria arrive this week! It will be the perfect time to add them, as the adults seem to be dying off, and if they laid eggs those will just be hatching into their larval stage when I introduce their new room mates
Btw found a nice doc on their life cycle here: http://www.greenhouse.cornell.edu/pests/pdfs/insects/FG.pdf
Cheers!
Thanks! Yeah hoping she continues that way hahaThat girl looks like the business mate. Keep the pics and updates coming
Thank you so much for thisLookin really good! Great job, now the hard work is repayed and it looks like your making out real nice.
The whole rootbound thing. Sadly I'd have to agree. 2 plants in 1 pot is a competition for root space and 1 plant will always dominate, that one is dawn.
The plants will always act screwy and show symptoms in the leaves. I've once had a plant that lost 50% of its viable fans while in the mid flower phase from being rootbound. Cost me a significant loss in yeild but I learned the symptoms of that particular plant and have since gone with large fabric pots. It's hard to out grow a 20 gallon fabric indoors-lol
I think your plants look great for their age and the leaf loss isn't that bad. I'd finish them out just the way they are. Next time go for 1 plant per plastic pot or 1 10 gallon fabric and get 2 plants.
NL#5 is a hardy strain and very tasty potent smoke. Your in for a treat very soon.
I think the compost could definitely be used as a tea starter. All you really need is 1 handful, into a 1 gallon brewer. Yours is currently being used as a top dress, microbes populate the top 2-4 inches of a soil (usually compost or humus (leaf mold)) so I'd say that's the freshest most microbial rich spot of the soil. And especially if fungus gnats are going for it. There must be fungal hyphae (mycelium threds) present and that makes a great year when the fungal spores are already germinated. They take the longest to develop in a tea, bacteria are the very fastest.Thank you so much for this
It reminds me of how the the central concept of nurturing a living soil and growing plants in it is trust.
To trust the plants to know what they're doing - so they're rootbound, and drop part of their leaves to balance their upper growth with the capabilities of the root system below. Doing their thing, all is well.
Btw I am now watering small amounts daily to keep the top soil moist for the SF-nematodes, and haven't seen any wilting since.
EDIT: I take that back -- it's still happening - I guess I had selective blindness there for a bit lol
And yes! To learn from it and make sure there is enough soil provided for comfort in future - wow 20 gallons!!
I also do love the look of those fabric pots, but I've never seen them around here, was playing with the idea of getting some felt material and sewing some myself
TBH the only reason they're both in one pot was that I was figuring Dusk wasn't going to be going anywhere --
I was wrong lol -- again, trust!
Just as to trust that the soil life will regulate itself, provided as it is with a good base mix, regular mulches of organic matter, and soon, some worm castings - maybe as tea, since I don't have much yet (trying to regrow a worm population in a bin I am temporarily taking care of).
Speaking of which!
Do you think the compost in that bin can already be used for making a tea?
This is from a few days ago:
View attachment 3581572
The compost is only like 3cm deep in a round bin diameter 16 inches, but it has a lovely earthy smell to it, so I was figuring I could amend the no-till with a tea made from a handful or so of it?
Maybe not till after the harvest or would it make sense to kind of feed them now they have it so cramped?
Cheers!