Need help starting autoflowers

Delps8

Well-Known Member
Per @go go kid, I suspect that pot size can impact on plant size but I have large plants grown in 5 gallon buckets.

Autos aren't some weird beast. In the same way that breeders cross breed cannabis sativa and cannabis indica to get the traits that they want from those strains, breeders breed in genes from cannabis ruderalis so that the plants will go into flower after a certain number of days. I only started growing in 2021 so I don't have any knowledge of "the bad old days" of autos but I have zero interest in folks who can't move past that. Sure, they sucked. That was then, this is now.

My first 5 or so grows were autos and, since I didn't know that they sucked, I just treated it like a cannabis plant and biggest problem I had was keeping them in the tent.

Regardless of the environment in which your growing autoflower cannabis, it's a cannabis plant. The attached graphic shows the parameters of the grow environment. Step through each one, learn about how it applies in growing cannabis, and then apply that knowledge.

Growing cannabis isn't rocket surgery - follow the basics and it will turn out pretty well.


10 Parameters of Growth.png


Friggin autoflower can't stay in the tent (that's one plant).
IMG_7406.jpeg

And my beautiful photoperiod that got bud rot (Spring 2023)

IMG_0213.jpeg
 

Hugo Phurst

Well-Known Member
I'm growing outdoors. What can I do differently this time to have large plants
Plant them in ground or big pots, 10 gal is minimum IMO, bigger would be better. Last years autos filled 25 gal pots.
As much direct sunlight as possible, 6 hours a day of direct light is minimum or you won't get much.
Big tomato cages too.

Good luck
 

Delps8

Well-Known Member
Check the top of the chart — "Light".

The shape and structure of the plant in the photo are those of a plant that hasn't received much light. It's short, has a limited number of larger leaves, very few branches, and has grown tall.

The only way that plants can generate energy is when light, water, and carbon dioxide are used to make glucose. As you add more light, a plant will grow more quickly, up to the "light saturation point", and it's almost a direct relationship between increased light and increased yield.

I suspect that's the situation for this plant. It's not that it's unhealthy. The primary issue is that it hasn't received much light.
 

itsclaydo

Member
Check the top of the chart — "Light".

The shape and structure of the plant in the photo are those of a plant that hasn't received much light. It's short, has a limited number of larger leaves, very few branches, and has grown tall.

The only way that plants can generate energy is when light, water, and carbon dioxide are used to make glucose. As you add more light, a plant will grow more quickly, up to the "light saturation point", and it's almost a direct relationship between increased light and increased yield.

I suspect that's the situation for this plant. It's not that it's unhealthy. The primary issue is that it hasn't received much light.
This plant receives ample light imho
 

conor c

Well-Known Member
Plant them straight in the ground if possible or use bigger pots also genetics matters too the autos made with the earlier genetics stay shorter also the sativa leaning autos tend to be bigger also give them as much light as possible especially in the morning so the dew dries up as well
 
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