Yea I looked at that, but Its not really what Im looking for... what I may be calling bonzai style mums may actually be called something else. Thank you though.dude if ya cant find nothing here try this link its a great bonzai mother guide
http://www.weedguru.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=88&t=26668
isnt that called lolly poppingYea I looked at that, but Its not really what Im looking for... what I may be calling bonzai style mums may actually be called something else. Thank you though.
What Im talking about is where there are no leaves on the stock for about a foot or so then it gets bushy as hell.
Yes, and consider it a dirty word in this thread.isnt that called lolly popping
lol fair enoughYes, and consider it a dirty word in this thread.
clever,Yes, and consider it a dirty word in this thread.
I have 4 strains.
Dutch Passion Orange Bud
Barney Farms LSD
DNA Lemon Skunk
DNA Sour Cream
I would like to do it to one. which one would benefit the most?
You need to understand where the dormant foliar buds are located. In the case of cannabis and many other plant materials, they're in the axils of where the leaf petioles, branches, attach to the trunk. More are located along the "trunk" but it takes alot to make them break out, so, for the sake of discussion, keep that in mind.I just have one question however(btw i completely understand the topping technique and i did from page1)
you mentioned earlier that you could in theory use this concept on any plant - even an oak tree,
but lets say for a tomato plant: there are no opposing nodes on a tomato plant so how would you do it then? (this is purely out of interest in botany as i hate tomatoes)
Thanks. I don't allow popular opinion sway me or forum politics define who I am.anyway i think its terrible, but oddly funny, that your possibly the only grower on this site, that i can truely trust for advice, because you advise from experience(without influence from all the commercial crap surrounding the growing community, like soma for example), and not only that but you'd rather tell them to go find out through their own experience rather than be told what to do off a screen.
I feel like this is the most efficient methods of combining the methods. The real stress of topping, which isn't much to begin with, is done with and you can continue to train your plant without major snips. Plus topping first really sets the whole process into gear, and the side branches more readily come out.I grow in square plastic pots, if I top for four colas, let the new "main" branches grow a bit and then tie them down (just once), one in each corner of the pot, reckon this would make a decent combination of the two techniques to check out?