Reeeeeeeeediculous

jcdws602

Well-Known Member
They will come back fully as long as you transplant carefully.......you might be set back time wise but they can definitely make a full recovery
 

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
They will come back fully as long as you transplant carefully.......you might be set back time wise but they can definitely make a full recovery
thanks jcdws i appreciate that, let's hope they do, i will be very careful and use a good clean seed starter mix, i just can't give up on them ;-)
 

namtih024

Active Member
ya, if they're that important dont throw them out, its just that i used to be a commercial medical grower, and to this day i usually end up getting rid of about half of my plants. out of every two clones one will be better than the other, the ratio is worse with seedlings, so i grow more than needed then sell/ give away/ toss the weaker one. now its just habit, if i find a plants not preforming i usually dont keep it around, i figure focus my energy on the better ones. but if your just doing a more personal crop where your able to take care of them all there's no need to toss any, they will still give you some good bud, but when you get that seed starter i recomend planting a few new seeds to grow along the plants you have now, you wont be dissapointed with this
 
before you transplant make sure to have a hole at the bottom of your first buckets to drain(which looks like it might since you have a bucket in a bucket, that just my assumption) Then a proper soil mixture of soil with perlite, vermiculite, or what i'm going to use for my next grow coco coir, from what i'm reading 80/20 is good (soil/what ever your going to use to help drain water) i would also test this soil to see how well it drains before i'd transplant(thats just me). then make some room in the new soil and CAREFULLY scoop out the plant sense it hasn't grown much 3-4 inches at least underneath it in the soil and put in in its new home. then water and wait. always was your hand before messing with the roots just to make sure. i think that with allowing better drainage it should take off in a week or two
 

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
thanks guys, i am going to try to save them, i knew there would be a learning curve with this but i had no idea how much of one there was LOL

here's to you guys :bigjoint: thanks again :peace:
 

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
thanks dam, i found that out the hard way with this grow as well. i started the bagseed i party cups then i was told just go straight to the pot you are gonna leave them in if you have room, and i guess that was not a good idea :wall: now i know :eyesmoke:
 

ronshamen

Active Member
this is so much fun, learning stuff the hard way! I say she more mistakes u make on the first time- the better your second time will be! i just harvested my first grow last week. it was crap. i'm sure my second grow is gonna be muche better. and so will you'rs!
 

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
this is so much fun, learning stuff the hard way! I say she more mistakes u make on the first time- the better your second time will be! i just harvested my first grow last week. it was crap. i'm sure my second grow is gonna be muche better. and so will you'rs!
let's hope so buddy, let's hope so :-) good luck to you all and thanks again :peace:
 

namtih024

Active Member
yep there is def a learning curve, i know these things because i have experienced them. i have made the same mistake myself, now these things are second nature. i recommend purchasing a good grow book, personally i have an Ask Ed (Ed Rosenthal) two versions of Indoor Marijuana Horticulture (Jorge Cervantes) a copy of Guerilla Growing (Jorge Cervantes) and a stack of high times three feet high. i would recommend any of these books or authors. i have read every one cover to cover about 10 times, and i still use it for reverence, especially when diagnosing problems and pest. having a good grow book will drastically decrease your learning curve and get you to bigger better buds sooner. also with a reputable book you dont have to worry about the misinformation that you could get online or from well meaning friends. good luck
 

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
yep there is def a learning curve, i know these things because i have experienced them. i have made the same mistake myself, now these things are second nature. i recommend purchasing a good grow book, personally i have an Ask Ed (Ed Rosenthal) two versions of Indoor Marijuana Horticulture (Jorge Cervantes) a copy of Guerilla Growing (Jorge Cervantes) and a stack of high times three feet high. i would recommend any of these books or authors. i have read every one cover to cover about 10 times, and i still use it for reverence, especially when diagnosing problems and pest. having a good grow book will drastically decrease your learning curve and get you to bigger better buds sooner. also with a reputable book you dont have to worry about the misinformation that you could get online or from well meaning friends. good luck
i gotta get that book, the Master Kush are dead, i mean D E A D dead :-( i am trying to figure this out and i came to the perlite which i researched and according to the bag and online information, perlite is supposed to be odor free but it smells like ammonia, WTF, AND it has NPK, trace amounts but still :wall: is this perlite bad or what?
 

ronshamen

Active Member
perlite should be oderless & nute less. get a new one. i would recomend coco w/perlite, its cheep and has no nutes at all in the soil. that way you can detremin what nutes and how much- if any- you whant in your medium.
 
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