For The Person Who Has Never Seen Type II/Indica's Without Leaf Tip Burn

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
View attachment 5162971

When you don't use all that "Bloom Buster, Trichome Inducing, Special Blueberry Bud Juice, Super Plant Food", it's easy.

Miracle Grow Moisture potting soil, without fucking _anything_ (since this is the initial use of it) with the proper genetics, and leaf burn/bleaching is a non-issue.
I got something that looks like a pretty indica.
It’s a bagseed, so it should be interesting.0518A1D2-7BFD-45AC-9F72-23DB3D0EC901.jpeg
Edit: my luck it’s a male.
 

rkymtnman

Well-Known Member
More advice on what I need to do, gee thanks...

View attachment 5163068

For fuck sake, I was just trying to show it can be done and couldn't remember the poster who didn't think it could be done, yet I get all this expert, experienced "advice".

Believe it or not, I don't need advice on how to develop cannabis... I 'm good.
there is tip burn all over those plants. lmao!!!!!
 

Splinter7

Well-Known Member
lighten up, cupcake.

it's a line from animal house. :dunce:

no hard feelings, lol...i just think overfed is better than underfed from personal experience. most people/plants would agree that too much food feels a lot better than too little. i thought it would have been cool to have green plants with lots of leaves the whole way through. the yellowest and burnt grows have always given me more bud, the green grow not as much. if you get nute burn, it stays there permanently...so you can just nute up until that happens and dial back a bit to get to near max food supply/intake.
 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
In case anyone wants to know.

Miracle-Grow Moisture Control Potting Mix 0.21-0.11-0.16 Guaranteed Analysis F1144: Total Nitrogen (N) (a Portion of the Nitrogen, Phosphate and Potash Has Been Coated to Provide [0.12%] Coated Slow Release Nitrogen [N], [0.04%] Coated Slow Release Available Phosphate [P2O5] and [0.08%] Coated Slow Release Soluble Potash [K2O]) (0.21%), Ammoniacal Nitrogen (0.113%), Nitrate Nitrogen (0.097%), Available Phosphate (P2O5) (a Portion of the Nitrogen, Phosphate and Potash Has Been Coated to Provide [0.12%] Coated Slow Release Nitrogen [N], [0.04%] Coated Slow Release Available Phosphate [P2O5] and [0.08%] Coated Slow Release Soluble Potash [K2O]) (0.11%), Soluble Potash (K2O) (a Portion of the Nitrogen, Phosphate and Potash Has Been Coated to Provide [0.12%] Coated Slow Release Nitrogen [N], [0.04%] Coated Slow Release Available Phosphate [P2O5] and [0.08%] Coated Slow Release Soluble Potash [K2O]) (0.16%), ,Derived from Polymer-Coated: Ammonium Nitrate, Ammonium Phosphate, Calcium Phosphate, and Potassium Sulfate; and Ammonium Nitrate, Ammonium Phosphate, Calcium Phosphate, and Potassium Sulfate.

Polymers used ? Who fucking knows
 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
Apparently bag batches come from multiple sources - new hampshire blends / texas blends / etc.

So the probability of different versions in bag is there.
They rotate coir and pith - processed “ forest products “ I.E . ( sawdust / mill waste ) and full urea based elements. Urea is for great fertilizer bombs.

Hardly worthy for ornamental use yet alone eating this shit.

6270FB8A-E615-4966-BD92-5433562EF37B.jpeg

I’m sure a little more digging will expose more interesting things.
 

bam0813

Well-Known Member
no one is drunk and nor stupid. i would rather be 5lbs overweight than 5lbs underweight when it mattered. fight me yo...i am bigger than you and your underfed plants.
Id rather be lean and 5 light if the 5 extra is fat. You’ll be winded and pieced up
 
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