You may not get any help until you give everyone their fair share of your inheritance.
Kidding.
Your recipe might be low in potassium. I would suggest to check your N-P-K ratios and line them up with what your strain needs.
So complicated.
I put a seed in dirt, set it by a window, and watered it once every week or so (if I didn't forget). Six months later, I had about eight grams of good weed.
Now that I want bigger yield, I'm giving more light and occasional fertilizer. It's going great.
I don't understand all...
My ignorance shorted her some N at the switch. Before I knew what I'd done, the railroad had begun.
I think the cannibalism might have slowed after I gave her some 4-4-4, but it was kinda too late.
Sounds like you've learned a lesson in timing. I may get bitten by that one as well. I may have to move my whole grow from my unconditioned shop into my conditioned house in a couple months.
Happy growing. :eyesmoke:
All true, all good.
My experience has been the same. As a matter of fact, whenever I transplant a plant, any plant, it loves the fresh soil and breathing room--and usually shoots up an inch within 24 hours.
Just make sure you water the pot well after a transplant. Top watering is fine for this...
I'm interested in the solution to your problem. I am glad to see pictures. More might be good, if you took pictures through your past failed tries.
However, that pepper plant does not look good. It has many ripening peppers, yes, but those leaves are very small and twisted, giving the plant an...
Wait a minute. Are you actually pulling the plants out of the soil, or are you sliding the whole chunk (roots, dirt and all) out of the solo cup and planting that whole thing in the new pot?
I am currently learning this lesson big time.
My soil is very, very hot and I'm toed up to nitrogen toxicity. If I don't water a certain way, my potassium starts to lock out.
It's not a balancing act I enjoy.
There are many techniques for successful cloning. The hardest part is finding what works for you, and most people get to their own method through trial and error.
I put mine in cups of water in a tiny tent under a blurple with a crate over the plants (to cut down on light without sending the...
Light is measured in many ways (color, intensity, pressure, all governed by frequency, wavelength, and amplitude).
You have not done basic research. As such, you haven't the foundation to question the font of knowledge you can find on this forum.
It's a gimmick for sure. You will only get the power that is drawn from the wall.
At different stages, plants require different amounts of light. For a 130W blurple, I would have both switches on all the time, except maybe at the tiny seedling stage.
I thought Rurumo's answer got at what we need from you to answer your question with any level of confidence. I don't mean to be cheeky, but it's really hard to give you a good answer without more information. I think that's why you're not getting the kinds of answers you might be expecting.
Is there a reason you are not using tap water? A lot of people rely on tap water for calcium and magnesium. If you're using distilled water, you might be running into cal-mag deficiency.