mellokitty
Moderatrix of Journals
wtf....... WHY does it keep doing that?!?! if you find this thread closed without prior announcement, please let me know, there's apparently some sort of glitch at play here......
digi-scope?? i'm not familiar .... i have spent next to nothing on a jewllers loupe (30x) but as i suspected i can harldly see my tric heads thay are still too small (i can see they are clear and spikey still apart from some on the bud leaves have round heads) but i don't feel that confident with itthanks troutie, good to know about the light/dark thing!! (makes total sense why it focuses on the leaves now.) i've been playing with the manual focus too (finally figured out what the MF button is! ) but.... *ehem*
i also have this funny thing happen where the thumbnails i think look best blow up to be the blurriest of the bunch..... *sigh*
for my next budporn purchase i'm torn between a macro lens and digi-scope right now...... options options.
thank you both, i'm rather gunshy on the flush/not flush debate. it might just be my own experience, but i find the not-flush side is very quick to denigrate, dismiss, and condescend. (apologies to all the respectful non-flushers, y'all are *superstars*.)
i'm glad you brought up the organics thing too, muggie. according to one of my horticulturalist friends: (my bold)
"When it comes to flushing....you are starving the plant. That's the point. You are turning a fat man into a triathelte. We over fertilize and the plant will store unconverted nutrients in salt form the same way we store energy in fat or squirrels put away nuts for the winter! The unconverted salts will leave a bitter taste in ANY fruit. honestly I can even tell when someone has used diammonium phosphate rather than monopotassium phosphate both of which are totally over supplied. Most commercial growers keep feed levels consistent with growth. As hobby growers we focus on "juicing" the plant hence the build up. Interesting enough why does it not impact organics which can't really be flushed out of medium? This is due to the decomposition process rather than the immediate water soluble nature of chemicals. Chemical are similar to fast food. They will pack on pounds but its not an entirely natural process. I am getting away from the point. Flushing in its most pure form is to force the plant to metabolize and nutrients that have built up in tissue unconverted(example N in non amino form) by first stripping available nutrients away from the medium/root zone. Which in turn causes the plant to convert its reserves and build up essential oil, amino acids, brix content etc. There is no question if you flush for 14 days you will lose quantity but there is also little doubt it improves quality."
he used to work for Big Ag and has some insight into that field too, so i brought up the question of why there are so few peer-reviewed agricultural studies about overfertilising and was met with something between a snort and a guffaw - "kitty, we as cannabis farmers are a special demographic - most of us can afford to "juice" our crops, whereas buddy with the 100 acres of blueberries over there is probably more worried about fertilising enough. agricultural studies about overferting are uncommon because it's not a common enough problem among farmers for somebody to throw a bunch of money at it to study it."
fair do's.
further, i have yet another friend who just started her horticulture degree (gawd, i'm soooo jellllyyyy of all my hort students) and while helping her study cell components for basic botany, i found this little tidbit in her textbook: ("botany for gardeners", 3rd edition, brian capon, timber press) (again, my bold)
"A vacuole occupies a large part of the volume of most plant cells. Although the word 'vacuole' means 'empty space,' it is a membrane-bound inner sac containing much of a cell's stored water and serves as a repository of excess mineral nutrients as well as toxic waste products from the cell's metabolism."
citric acid increases CE?? do elaborate pleeeeez, i'm very very curious.With citric acid and sucanate the near the end every watering to increase cation exchange in the myco..
digital microscope -- looks like a regular microscope but plugs into the computer. seem to be in the $50 - $100 range for a basic kit.digi-scope?? i'm not familiar .... i have spent next to nothing on a jewllers loupe (30x) but as i suspected i can harldly see my tric heads thay are still too small (i can see they are clear and spikey still apart from some on the bud leaves have round heads) but i don't feel that confident with it
its macro lens for me.... but i'm a bugger for a toy! ....and i love my camera
i have shakey hands for a 30 (odd) yr old non drinker so manual focus is such a chore ..... oh oh oh thats it ... click ...Bugger!
digital microscope -- looks like a regular microscope but plugs into the computer. seem to be in the $50 - $100 range for a basic kit.
now i just have to decide whether i'm more of a sucker for bud porn or trich porn, i guess.
and yeah, me too with the shaky hands -- i keep a bucket with me when i'm taking pics for leaning my elbows on.
(and my camera's favourite trick is..... oh oh oh that's it.... half-press focus-"Please change the batteries") @#$%&!!![/QUOTE
you using Canon™?
]yup. it's a handmedown from a photography nerd, and i love it.
how are you using your loupe? Dr Amber T gave me a tip that they're easier to use if you take a small sample (a leaf with trichs or something), lay it on a flat surface, and put the scope on top. (i have the ol' radio shack classic and she has a similar one i believe.)
omg i never even thought about that. what a fantastic idea.Watch out with just checking leaf trichs. From my observations the trichs on leaves mature much earlier than those on the calyx.
I'm stoked on the future macro videos
You will be making videos with the digital scope right?
I'll cosign that, I've seen it (and watched for it since then) pretty consistently over the last couple years.Watch out with just checking leaf trichs. From my observations the trichs on leaves mature much earlier than those on the calyx.
I'm stoked on the future macro videos
You will be making videos with the digital scope right?
I don't generally harvest by trich's, but I do look it all over during trimming. I use the same method as you to determine ideal harvest times.you guys are so diligent with your scopes and the trich checking.... hats off to you.
we have a bit more holistic approach (some would call it 'lackadaisical' ) .... we weigh other stuff like pistil receding, calyx size, colours, vigour/lack thereof, etc. to decide when we start the flush. mr kitty doesn't like to start flushing until the plant starts to show signs of senescence.
Yup. I go by this as well. Trich are just one part of the larger puzzle.I don't generally harvest by trich's, but I do look it all over during trimming. I use the same method as you to determine ideal harvest times.