Dude you need to put that mom in a system and flower it out to see how nasty that beast gets lolI just keep cutting the roots and lollipop ping my mothers. Working great so far.
OH yes all the little clones bounced back too. HeheheDude you need to put that mom in a system and flower it out to see how nasty that beast gets lol
Obviously it boucned back from that trim up
I think this came from old thinking about the tap root, giving it a deeper place to go would help. But over the years this has been proven wrong. For example those 100 gallon fabric pots the commercial growers use in Cali aren't very deep at all. The current thought is about sqft of soil growing space. Just for reference the 100 gal pots are about 15 sq ftI read that pot plants prefer a taller, narrower container over a wide shallow one. What would be the minimum container height for best results?
Yeh,I got into some of his stuff a few years ago, i need to look again. I got some of his small root pots, they are hard as hell to fill with all the little spaces inside., I jammed them last time and couldn't get the roots out without ripping roots.If you check out dr whitcomb he tells some cool stuff about roots systems
I've been using the 4 (well more like 3.5ish) inch method for the past 15 years and it works wonders. Never knew that Whitcomb had a 4" system but I found out about the method by accident. 15 years ago, I tried to jam pack as many 2 gallon pots in to my closet, as possible. It didn't fit all the plants. I had a roll of window screens sitting around so i came up with the idea to cut it up and turn it into pots. My closet was 2.5 feet by 4 feet and with 100 clones, the required size to fit all of them were 3 - 4 inch pots. I made the window screen pots, transplanted the clones and vegged for 3 weeks in the closet. When the outdoor season came around and it came time to "unpot" and transplant the clones into a 2nd pot to harden off outside, I noticed there weren't many tap roots at all. Lots of very fine lateral/feeder roots. I will never forget, It was the most fibrous, dense and fluffy root mass i've ever produced. This was where I also accidentally discovered how to "air prune" roots as well. Of course I never knew what these methods were, nor what it was called at the time. I just knew I accidentally discovered something that works (as far as root mass). I should have developed and sold "window screen" pots a long time ago. Would have become a thousandaire now, LOL, but always thought weed would never become legal. Who would've known. Anyways, plants grew stronger, more vigorous, and ultimately, better yield. I just recently, about 5 years ago, found out about Carl Whitcomb and yes the man know his shit. I was actually really surprised to see that he uses this method. I literally still use the window screen pot even to this day, and transplant into squat pots (short and wide) when enough roots have developed. This gives more room for the lateral roots to expands.If you check out dr whitcomb he tells some cool stuff about roots systems
does whitcomb favor squat pots?I've been using the 4 (well more like 3.5ish) inch method for the past 15 years and it works wonders. Never knew that Whitcomb had a 4" system but I found out about the method by accident. 15 years ago, I tried to jam pack as many 2 gallon pots in to my closet, as possible. It didn't fit all the plants. I had a roll of window screens sitting around so i came up with the idea to cut it up and turn it into pots. My closet was 2.5 feet by 4 feet and with 100 clones, the required size to fit all of them were 3 - 4 inch pots. I made the window screen pots, transplanted the clones and vegged for 3 weeks in the closet. When the outdoor season came around and it came time to "unpot" and transplant the clones into a 2nd pot to harden off outside, I noticed there weren't many tap roots at all. Lots of very fine lateral/feeder roots. I will never forget, It was the most fibrous, dense and fluffy root mass i've ever produced. This was where I also accidentally discovered how to "air prune" roots as well. Of course I never knew what these methods were, nor what it was called at the time. I just knew I accidentally discovered something that works (as far as root mass). I should have developed and sold "window screen" pots a long time ago. Would have become a thousandaire now, LOL, but always thought weed would never become legal. Who would've known. Anyways, plants grew stronger, more vigorous, and ultimately, better yield. I just recently, about 5 years ago, found out about Carl Whitcomb and yes the man know his shit. I was actually really surprised to see that he uses this method. I literally still use the window screen pot even to this day, and transplant into squat pots (short and wide) when enough roots have developed. This gives more room for the lateral roots to expands.
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No, he mentions nothing about it. I favor squat pots. In my experience, when I grow in deep narrow pots, I get tall plants. When I switched to short wide pots, I get a shorter wider plant. I remember reading somewhere on Michigan State University's website that the way the root grows, influences the way the top grows. To an certain extent, plants mimic the shape of their pots. Makes perfect sense and i have seen this first hand. These are my DIY 8-9 gallon pots. Short squat bushy plants about 5 - 6 feet high, just how I like it. https://www.rollitup.org/t/best-soil-from-lowes.901731/page-4does whitcomb favor squat pots?
Sounds reasonable to me. I just got some phat sacks transplanter 1 gallons they are shorter than I usually use (6" high x 7" diameter) so maybe I will see a difference.No, he mentions nothing about it. I favor squat pots. In my experience, when I grow in deep narrow pots, I get tall plants. When I switched to short wide pots, I get a shorter wider plant. I remember reading somewhere on Michigan State University's website that the way the root grows, influences the way the top grows. To an certain extent, plants mimic the shape of their pots. Makes perfect sense and i have seen this first hand. These are my DIY 8-9 gallon pots. Short squat bushy plants about 5 - 6 feet high, just how I like it. https://www.rollitup.org/t/best-soil-from-lowes.901731/page-4
This grow was done in narrow tall pots. Grew too tall (over 9 feet). I didn't like it. Post harvested, the space (soil) after 2 feet deep, had very little to no root growth. Wasted space and soil, as well as wasted water and nutrients.
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Maybe it's just my opinion but in short wide pots, 1. Millions of roots expanding laterally = more surface coverage and sturdier plant. 2. Water/food gets distributed alot more evenly across the root mass, which mean more efficient watering/feeding. 3. More shallow so water gets to root faster (i even found myself using less water, and in turn, nutrients). 4. Soil dries out faster which means more frequent watering/feeding, which also means faster growth. I believe, in a way, this all leads back to the 4 inch method. The theory behind it, I think, is to eliminate the tap root growth and encourage lateral feeder root growth for a more efficient robust root system.
I use the supermarket polypropylene reusable bags ($0.50-$1) and cut/stitch them into fabric pots. Some have 2" of a plastic bottle bottom as a small Hempy reservoir.I'm gonna make some homemade fabric pots, what would be a good landscape fabric or other fabric for them?
You can check these out. 3' x 50' is more than enough and can make you plenty.I'm gonna make some homemade fabric pots, what would be a good landscape fabric or other fabric for them?