Just the answer i was looking for. THXYou can, but don't do it.
Learn about photosynthesis and how it relates to the inverse square law.
no, do not listen to thissurely he can lift her skirt a little! ive read on this forum somewhere that u can trim 20% without stressing her too much.i always trim all the lower shit to let air thru the underneath
When you cut them do not cut them by the stalk cut them by the leaf and let the stem dry up and fall off on its own. (that is important)
yea so did i gonna have to do some research...Ive never heard that before. Actually Ive heard the exact opposit. Ive always thought your suposed to try to get as close to stalk as possible.
Lower stuff, sucker stems, I all for trimming those away. Do not remove a healthy fan leaf to get light lower in the plant. You'll get light to the lower portions of the plant, where leaf surface area is much less and further away from the light source.in early flower i never take anything except the lower portion of the plant to clear up for air flow, but atm i am dealing with plants a lot bigger than the one pictured. at that size i see no reason to trim anything. in late flower (week 7+ since flowering starts), however, i will remove most yellowing leaves and occasionally remove a very few key fan leaves that are blocking buds.
Well, your observation is opposite mine. I've done the trimming leaves shit twice over the last 12 years, just to make sure, and all my yields decreased by 20% in a completely dialed in perpetual harvest room. I'm betting it's just that you were a better grower by the time you got around to trying this myth out, and have been robbing yourself of yield ever since.i trim fans at weeks 2 & 5 pretty aggressively with no detriment to the plant. in fact my yields went up when i started trimming.