Sorry about your loss! I had a bad slug problem last year...I know how it feels.This is my grow; plant damage is from fucking earwigs, killed six of the little bastards tonight. View attachment 3670439 View attachment 3670440 View attachment 3670441 View attachment 3670439 View attachment 3670440
Hey you can still get some serious weight off a ten gallon outside with the right pruning/bending program. Good luck to u@WV: Jetson, I'm running THC Bomb and my own cross of THC Bomb x AK-47 F1.
@ganga gurl420, Going to put them in 10 gal tan soft pots. I would like to put them in bigger pots but cost, space and movement made me opt for the 10 gal.
This is only my second grow so still learning.
Yeah... what HR said!Good to see more NW growers showing up.
It's always something. When we bought our house it was all lawn, and every year we carve away more lawn and plant more gardens. The first year there were no bugs, and every subsequent year there have been new pests we've never seen before. The diversity we've introduced has attracted every kind of vermin imaginable. That said, haven't seen too many earwigs here. They can be a serious problem though, I knew some organic farmers that had major battles with them. I'm sure there is info online about how to deal with them.This is my grow; plant damage is from fucking earwigs, killed six of the little bastards tonight.
Good to see more NW growers showing up.
I've been told that outside (with the right strains, soil, and ample sunlight) you can get 1oz per gallon of soil, so about 10oz per plant in a 10 gallon pot. That came from a grower more experienced than I, so I'm looking for 8oz from each of my 10 gallon pots.
Last year was my first outdoor and I grew some in the ground, and some in 100 gallon pots. This year the biggest pot I'm using is 15 gallons, but there will be some 10's and a pair of 5's. My goals and focus have changed.
There are a lot of reasons, but the main one is that where I live the weather is unpredictable ("wind events"), and fall weather in general has a pretty wide range of possibilities. Summer season is a long run, and I don't want to put all that work in just to have the last two weeks of September be rainy and cold and have the choice of pulling my crop before its ready, or watching it get moldy. So, I'd rather have smaller mobile plants that if need be I can move into the garage and finish (at least some of) them there under HPS.That would be nice if thats what I pulled off.. (1 ounce per gallon) haha but that is probably only if everything is perfect.
May I ask why you went from big pots to small ones?
They're looking good!strong growth; fan leaves are already bigger than my hands. Topped them the other day. Tired of all the rain, of course this Oregon.
That is amazing that you had one go into November! By the end of September one of my plants had bud rot and others had just started to get PM. I had them under a cover so they never got rained on directly, and I sprayed them with every (organic) fungicide right up to the time they started budding. I did make some mistakes, but I learned a lot. By mid-October we had already harvested everything we could, and composted the rest because there was pervasive PM.Maybe it will balance out and will get a nice dry fall to keep the mold at bay. Had to pull one early last year. My other strain was pounded by the rain and I kept it out till the second week of November no problems.
Nice! Did you get different phenotypes? Can you post any pics of the finished product? I grew two last year; got one male one female. The female showed sativa characteristics and the buds were purple and airy. One of the THC bombs already has some purple on the new growth and has sativa like leaves. The other one looks like a typical hybrid.   Here is the finished bud. Great smell smoke is smooth and taste great;potent stuff.I have a couple of THC Bombs they are about six weeks old.I grew out six of these last year,they produce big branch bending buds that like a bit of support.