what is short,tall, and medium

whiterhyno420

Well-Known Member
ok im looking for a very good strain but i have a limit to how big it can get. about how tall is something medium? i only have room for a 4 to 5 foot plant so is medium good for me or do i need some thing short
 

capecodkid

Active Member
I think you can go with any of they above. Look into LST Topping and Scrog. What do you have for a light/etc?
 

whiterhyno420

Well-Known Member
I think you can go with any of they above. Look into LST Topping and Scrog. What do you have for a light/etc?
well right now i got two little bag seeds growing those are gonna be practice for lst, and the girl i have now is in flowering and she has been topped. and as for scrog i have no clue wut thats is ive heard it a lot but dont know wut it is

and as for lights i use cfls,ffof soil mg nutes and big bud nute for flowering
 

PainWrek

Active Member
srog is screen of green. training the plant through a net to create an even canopy on the budsites
 

capecodkid

Active Member
Scrog = screen of green...Look into it.

This type of cultivation, called scrog, is based on the horizontal grow and it permits to optimize variable factors, as vertical space and light.
The theory is very simple: a horizontal net (at about 10 cm from the
medium) is settled, and the plant will be forced to pass through the holes of the net. This technique is particularly indicated for small spaces, where the height of the plant can be managed in a horizontal way. Moreover, scrog is useful to take the best from lamps: often the biggest leaves will overshadow the rest of the plant. The horizontal grow solve this problem putting leaves at the same distance from lights.
The practical realization of a scrog, instead, is more complicated: you can use a net for each plant, creating a modular scrog, or a larger net with more plants under it. You can use a garden net, one of those with wide meshes, typically green.
Problems are about: the installation of the net, the disposition of the plant, the sex of plants. With a modular scrog we must install a net for each single vase. The problem is that the net cannot be fixed to the vase if we want to
transplant it during its life.
With a normal scrog, the transplanting is very difficult because of the forced proximity of all the plants and because of the impossibility to separate them from the net. You have to calculate the disposition of your plants before positioning them, in order to be able to guide all the branches and to fill up the net uniformely, avoiding an excessive vertical grow.
In normal scrog, moreover, all the plants under the net must be of the same sex so it's advisable to use
pipings.
It's advisable to know the characteristics of the growth of plants bofore beginning a scrog; unexpeted increases could cancel the optimization obtained with this method.
The only disadvantage is the amount of work needed to construct and to upkeep the scrog
 

whiterhyno420

Well-Known Member
Scrog = screen of green...Look into it.

This type of cultivation, called scrog, is based on the horizontal grow and it permits to optimize variable factors, as vertical space and light.
The theory is very simple: a horizontal net (at about 10 cm from the
medium) is settled, and the plant will be forced to pass through the holes of the net. This technique is particularly indicated for small spaces, where the height of the plant can be managed in a horizontal way. Moreover, scrog is useful to take the best from lamps: often the biggest leaves will overshadow the rest of the plant. The horizontal grow solve this problem putting leaves at the same distance from lights.
The practical realization of a scrog, instead, is more complicated: you can use a net for each plant, creating a modular scrog, or a larger net with more plants under it. You can use a garden net, one of those with wide meshes, typically green.
Problems are about: the installation of the net, the disposition of the plant, the sex of plants. With a modular scrog we must install a net for each single vase. The problem is that the net cannot be fixed to the vase if we want to
transplant it during its life.
With a normal scrog, the transplanting is very difficult because of the forced proximity of all the plants and because of the impossibility to separate them from the net. You have to calculate the disposition of your plants before positioning them, in order to be able to guide all the branches and to fill up the net uniformely, avoiding an excessive vertical grow.
In normal scrog, moreover, all the plants under the net must be of the same sex so it's advisable to use
pipings.
It's advisable to know the characteristics of the growth of plants bofore beginning a scrog; unexpeted increases could cancel the optimization obtained with this method.
The only disadvantage is the amount of work needed to construct and to upkeep the scrog
wow sounds like a lot of work

ill look into it some more
 
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