I essentially do the same thing, just cut the branches into a pile and do a branch at a time once they're dry. That room stays around 60-65% RH so I just do them when I get some time, they hold well in there so no rush.How do you trim a whole plant like that? It's gotta be frustrating with all the bud flopping. I break it down in sections like 2 branches at a time.
I wish I could afford a cob set up I was running 400 watts mh and 400 watts hpsYeah that's a lot of light if you're talking COBs. I'm thinking these would spread over 3.5x3.5' or 3x4' well. I'll be running 315w of CMH beside it covering up to 3.5x7'. I like the bud quality with LED, imo they bring out more terps..
Wow...I never even thought of that....No Boveda needed there. Brilliant.That room stays around 60-65% RH
That's how I started with the 315w CMH a couple of years back. COBs weren't quite there yet but I didn't want to go hps and the cost of the 315's are in between watt-for-watt. COBs are a longer term investment but the payback is there in the long run.I wish I could afford a cob set up I was running 400 watts mh and 400 watts hps
Yeah the RH here is typically 45-50 ambient in the house but it's a double edged sword as I fight with keeping RH at manageable levels in the flower room. The exhaust from my veg cabinet blows into that room and keeps the RH higher, if it gets higher than 65% I open a vent in a tee for the incoming air going into the flower room, increase the variable controller for exhaust and it reduces RH by sucking air out of the drying room while maintaining the flower room RH. This time of year is a pain the ass, in between cold/hot so the furnace nor air conditioning are running, forces me to make constant adjustments to maintain RH at a reasonable level.Wow...I never even thought of that....No Boveda needed there. Brilliant.
...but I am betting that your ambient RH is not in the 20s typically. :0)
Nah. It only takes one good run for them to pay for themselves.That's how I started with the 315w CMH a couple of years back. COBs weren't quite there yet but I didn't want to go hps and the cost of the 315's are in between watt-for-watt. COBs are a longer term investment but the payback is there in the long run.
Yeah, depends how you calculate and how fast you depreciate the capital investment. For me it's a hobby, not depending on them for income so selling off a couple of QP's and they're paid for, everything from there is a bonus. This first run of 3 plants with them should pull at least 1/2 lb. even with the phenos I'll run which aren't big producers.Nah. It only takes one good run for them to pay for themselves.
Actually I train every plant normally, that newer batch is 4x 3gal's trained, taking up the same footprint as the 9x 2gal's untrained. Typically I super-crop the main and FIM once, sometimes more but there's diminishing returns if training too much so I'll be typically doing that once early and let them go from there. I find if I don't give them 2-3 weeks with no training before flipping they don't produce as well.Groerr, it doesnt look like you do a whole lot of training with your plants, just kind of let them do their thing xmas tree shape. Do you find the croping and training slows veg down too much or do you really just like the big top cola?
That's a good way to put it, I've found if I don't give them some time between training and flowering they don't do as well. If you veg longer you can train longer and get the benefit. It's a balance you have to work out in your setup, particularly if doing perpetual with limited veg space. I trained the shit out of my outdoor's last year but they had like 10-2 weeks of veg before they started pre-flowering so it paid back.It isn't so much a matter of whether to train the plants, it's all about how and when to do it for best results, IME.