Flowki
Well-Known Member
Nothing like a fresh start ;].Thanks man. That helps. And yes i was looking for a pat on the back. I apologize for any disrespect. You got it tho. Thank you!
Here is trichome production 9 days into flowering.
Hows it looking people?
Flowki, i forgot to mention i have 30 years landscaping/horticulture under my belt. Yes, it is first grow but i attempted once b4. 30 years ago. Got them to flowering and had to stop. WEBSITE DOES NOT SUK IM A BIG BABY
As far as I can see you've done a good job in terms of producing a healthy plant, really can't knock it. The only possible avenues to look into is light type, perhaps plant count too. More plants veg quicker as you'd know, it's also safer in that lose one plant to a genetic/environment factor you have others to soften the blow. In terms of lighting it may well be that swapping the t5 for a cmh is about all you'd need to do. I don't know much about the leds you are using but purple lights have generally had a bad rep for quite a while now. If that were to be true then you may have to look into alternitives later down the line if the drawback of those purple leds are not tolerable. Cobs and quantum boards seem to be the go to lighting choices these days, budget issues aside.
Given your horticultural background and being organic, it would be worth hitting the organic section here on the chance you'll learn something applicable to indoor growing. Perhaps keep an open mind on the differences between organic grown plants and synthetic. I don't know if it's growing skill issues but their seems to be a clear weight advantage in growing synthetically. Not that I'm suggesting you to go synthetic, just that if you were unaware of the yield differences it's a heads up in not getting disheartened.
I don't actually know how true it is that synthetic yields more than organic, but I get the feeling the complexities of organics and chance to get it wrong magnify what ever truth is in it. Do you have any experience on this?.
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