I don't keep moms as such. I'll flower a run of plants, take clones, then flower the clones and so on. Sometimes, like right now, I keep a few clones back so that I can start back up again in the fall. They'll tun into bigger plants (moms) toward August. I'll take clones, then, for an entire run and likely kill the plants as they'll be too big to flower as effectively. Hope that made sense.simon do you find bonsia trees any good for a mother plant ?
ok thanks simon, so you just take clones before you flower themI don't keep moms as such. I'll flower a run of plants, take clones, then flower the clones and so on. Sometimes, like right now, I keep a few clones back so that I can start back up again in the fall. They'll tun into bigger plants (moms) toward August. I'll take clones, then, for an entire run and likely kill the plants as they'll be too big to flower as effectively. Hope that made sense.
Simon
looks like a good amount of quality hash there
Made some hash yesterday. Two runs. These are the results.
Simon
I truly believe there's elegance in simplicity. Looking around the forum, folks fool around with air conditioning systems, water chillers, humidifiers.... I don't use any of that. Just lights, fans, Pro-Mix and a commercial fertilizer. Nothing else. No magic wands, no miracle potions. If I may wax poetic for a moment, there are two major elements to any pursuit - internal and external. In our case, the internal element can be defined as grower skill and the external as all other elements including the environment, the equipment, and arguably the most important, the genetics.ok thanks simon, so you just take clones before you flower them
I truly believe there's elegance in simplicity. Looking around the forum, folks fool around with air conditioning systems, water chillers, humidifiers.... I don't use any of that. Just lights, fans, Pro-Mix and a commercial fertilizer. Nothing else. No magic wands, no miracle potions. If I may wax poetic for a moment, there are two major elements to any pursuit - internal and external. In our case, the internal element can be defined as grower skill and the external as all other elements including the environment, the equipment, and arguably the most important, the genetics.
Genetics are crucial. I spend a good amount of time and resources on free seed plants, test runs and the like. The ones I don't keep are posted in this thread. The others will become next season' crop, but I digress. Genetics can mean the difference between a 1oz and a 4 oz plant. Literally. They define the smell, the potency, the bag appeal. All things staying equal, everything rests on the genetics.
My personal experience is such that finding a great plant is a crap shoot. For example, I flowered a free seed not expecting much, as the strain typically yields low. I grew it out solely out of personal curiosity. I actually had two seeds. The plants grew side by side. One yielded 4oz of the smelliest shit you'll get your hands on, beautiful buds hard as a rock that finished in 9 weeks (from seed). The other didn't do badly. It was a ~2.5oz plant with a muskier, earthier smell and a slightly fluffier structure. In September, I'm going out with a full run of the 4-ouncer. I'm convinced that if I were to buy a pack of the strain, as I've done many times hoping to do better, I wouldn't get the same plant again. So, I'm guarding the clone with my life!
Simon
Generally speaking, yes. Keep in mind that I mostly work with Indica-dom hybrids.hi simon
so you can get good phenotype from any strain and that how you hit big yeilds
its just pot luck if you have one in the pack or not
It seems like many new growers overcomplicate their feeding regiments. In some ways it's understandable. Growbooks paint a picture that's requires a good deal of complexity, forum posts support the same idea, as they're mostly written by folks who have little experience of their own, and the cycle continues. This isn't to say that those folks are all wrong. There are many ways to skin a cat. I prefer simple and relatively foolproof. You may notice that I use a complete fertilizer. Just add to water and pour into the pots. I've never measured/checked pH - never had a reason to - and I don't feed by measuring PPMs. Everything is systematic. The plants are fed the same every time, relative to their place in the cycle and the strain's (general) response to the fertilizer.so i have not used any boosters, just grow and bloom nutes so that is all you need
i was thinking most of these extra nutes are just to get growers to pay out more and hope it would increase there yeild
My pleasure. Folks rarely ask me practical questions about growing weed.thanks simon
well, you know, growing in a tent has it's restrictions. i'm happy with 160-200g per plant under a 600w. should come in around 700g off those 4. not really 1gpw though cause i do have the UV flood lamps.That's a very nice little plant, Phil. Thanks for sharing.
Simon
I just have to ask, how much have you spent on this so far? Seriously. How much has this cost you? You previously mentioned something to the tune of ~$19K. Noting your errr success and the time it took, I'll make you the same offer as I did a couple of months ago: If you make me feel comfortable, I'll just sell you the bud and save you the money, the time, the aggravation and the embarrassment. Let me know.been pulling them out during the day as i do some mods to the tents to get ready for a new chiller and some upgrades.