wannabe grower
Well-Known Member
You ever think about continuing your flush with distilled by doing the last bit with a carbonated water or Hydrogen Peroxide to get some extra Oxygen to the root zone?
I could be wrong but wouldnt the H2O2 kill all soil life, im not totally sure though. PeaceYou ever think about continuing your flush with distilled by doing the last bit with a carbonated water or Hydrogen Peroxide to get some extra Oxygen to the root zone?
JMO... At their present size. Why keep transplanting them into the next pot size bigger. Just put them in the final sized pot.. 3-5 gallon etc. Half the work and you don't have to stress the girls by continuing to transplant..Tomorrow I'm buying some distilled water or spring water and transplanting them into 1 gallon containers, and then we'll wait and see. Thanks for all the help, I'll post pics tomorrow after the transplant.
His aren't root bound, this one is.View attachment 1850417View attachment 1850415
This is my transplant i done tonight, looks similar to yours soil wise and roots so im guessing you got some nute or heat problem. Peace
This is half the problem with this site, my plant isnt rootbound it is perfect for a transplant, roots encircling the base three times on average is what to aim for, by the time roots have encircled the base three times i would assume they have also had the chance to establish in the rest of the soil.His aren't root bound, this one is.
H2O2 oxidizes protein molocules using the free O2 radicle released when added to H2O or water/aqueous solution. All organic life is made of proteins even you and me. Pour H2O2 on your skin and it oxidizes it or turns it white, this is not really somthing id recomend for soil microbes and life, maybe in hydro where you dont want any thing living apart from your plant but in soil i kind of thought H2O2 would affect soil life in some way.A small amount of H2O2 is good for healthy root systems but its a very small amount. And dont stress over buying water all the time, get yourself a few buckets and place them by ends of the gutters by your house if you want a lot of rainwater. also when they travel through the gutters in your house they pick up some beneficial minerals from the leaves. also you dont get water thats more aerated than rainwater, its natural and the pH is usually normal. If your having a problem with getting air to your roots you might want to make about a 2 inch layer of perlite above another 2 inches of soil so your roots dont start coming out of the pot.
and if theres a drought get some water from your hose and fill a bucket, within three day the sun should rid of chlorine and other harmful chemicals.
Let them be, what is done is done, some do look better though. PeaceAlright so I transplanted yesterday morning and I took pics right after the transplant, then I took pics this morning. There looking better, so this is very good.
I transplanted then watered about half gallon for each 1 gallon pot with distilled water.
Here are the pics, the first one is right after the transplant and the second one is from about 24 hours later.
I'm still worried about the one on the bottom right, there hasn't been much change and it's leaves are curling upwards and wrinkly.
Have you looked into H2O2 for soil more yet?? Peacei forgot to include the hydro part my fault, advanced offers h202 for "healthy root systems", but i think ive used a very small amount in my water before and it didnt hurt.
Leave them to use some of the nutrients in the soil first and establish roots. A couple of weeks then start the ferts again but maybe before that if they start growing well. Still just leave them to see what there doing. PeaceSo here they are 2 days later, growth has been great. I'm still worried about a couple, leaves are curling upwards, but otherwise everything is great.
When should I start feeding them?
weedle u said u let them dry out before watering again... u have to be really careful letting seedlings dry out. did u notice them wilting when they were dry? i let my seedlings dry out just 1 time during seedling stage and they got stunted like a mf for like 2 weeks. once seedling roots dry out they damage quickly. since roots dont repair themselves, the plant must wait till new roots grow before they continue developement. hope this helps. peaceSo I'm growing kalichakra from mandala. I planted these seeds on the 2nd and it took them 3-4 days to sprout so there a little older than 2 weeks.
I started them in Fox Farms Light Warrior. I've only every done one other grow and my plants at this age were easily triple the size of these ones.
There leaves are light and there not very wide at all, the tallest one is about 2".
I havn't fed them anything yet. I water every 3-4 days letting the soil dry out. pH is about 6.3-6.8. I'm using tap water that was let sit out for 12-24 hours, then pH adjusted with api's pH Down.
If anyone could help me that would be great, I don't want to lose these babies!
Spot on, under/overwatering and high temps/heat from the light are two things to get right before anything else, i cant stress this enough as they are the most limiting factors of any grow.weedle u said u let them dry out before watering again... u have to be really careful letting seedlings dry out. did u notice them wilting when they were dry? i let my seedlings dry out just 1 time during seedling stage and they got stunted like a mf for like 2 weeks. once seedling roots dry out they damage quickly. since roots dont repair themselves, the plant must wait till new roots grow before they continue developement. hope this helps. peace
In my opinion you should always let the soil dry out completly, regardless if you want to water or if you only have to water one plant, but decide to water all of them anyway.