Trousers
Well-Known Member
I guess those botanical laws are not applicable in my basement.Very simple botanical law...less leaves less production...period....end of story
period
end of story
derp
I guess those botanical laws are not applicable in my basement.Very simple botanical law...less leaves less production...period....end of story
this is already blatantly apparentI guess those botanical laws are not applicable in my basement.
period
end of story
derp
putting it all in caps still doesn't make it true..PLANTS PRODUCE NEW GROWTH WHEN U CHOP A LEADER OR TOP...ITS A NATURAL SURVIVAL REACTION....TRY CUTTING THE LEAVES OF A VEGING PLANT.....NO DIFF THAN A FLOWERING ONE...AND TRY TOPPING A FULL BUDDING PLANT...THEN U WILL GET TWO BUDS ...SOUNDS JUST AS SILLY AS u.
REALLY BUDDY ..SHIT FER BRAINS..I GUESS U KNO WHAT HE HAS OR DOESNT...CAUSE U KNOW EVERYTHING...I SURLY DONT, I JUST ASSUMES....POINT IS STILL CLEAR.....FUCK, IM SURE u WOULDNT CALL ME THAT TO MY FACE... BOY, OUT COLD IN ABOUT 1.5 SECONDS KID!jorge doesn't have anything shit fer brains. He tours OTHER PEOPLE'S GROWS and the very fact that you think he does shows your ignorance. Done here. Have a great existence
if the leaf is not productive then the PLANT will drop it on its own...btw leaves contribute more than photosynthesis hence why plants retain even yellowed leaves for some time....but that is ok as with anything else it seems you know better than the plants do what they need and do not need...myself I let them tell me-If a leaf is unable to synthesize carbohydrates from CO2 and water because it isn't receiving any PAR (photosynthetically active radiation), what does it contribute to the plant and it's productivity?
-Does the plant allocate any energy or resources to maintaining a leaf-- even when it (the leaf) is not contributing any "fuel" for the plant?
-What purpose could a leaf fulfill, if it can no longer photosynthesize?
- When does the plant spend more energy to support a leaf than the energy that leaf contributes to supporting the plant?
LOL true..............putting it all in caps still doesn't make it true..
I believe you are correct: the plant will release the leaf after it no longer needs it, but, only after it (the plant) is near the completion of its life cycle (toward the end of flowering). However, If we take the plant to our created environment (indoors) can we not save the plant some energy by exerting our own on its behalf (taking branches and leafs it will never have a use for)? It is also my belief that a plant will hold onto underdeveloped branches and the associated parts just in case the plants looses its top branches-- like a fail safe for survival. Also, what is auxin?if the leaf is not productive then the PLANT will drop it on its own...btw leaves contribute more than photosynthesis hence why plants retain even yellowed leaves for some time....but that is ok as with anything else it seems you know better than the plants do what they need and do not need...myself I let them tell me
...we're not 'arguing' about what's 'natural', we're discussing what's 'optimum' for us as indoor growers to maximize our yields, ...there is some debate as to whether or not strategic pruning stimulates new growth and increases yields, ...i think everyone agrees that indoor growing isn't 'natural', nor is de-foliation.I was just thinking, we are argueing over what is natural for a plant to produce the largest buds...But is growing with bulbs, indoors, in closets natural? Kinda ironic, don't ya think
You seem like a douche. The caps, the spelling, the syntax, the obvious misunderstanding of how an ellipsis works, the general douchebaggery...REALLY BUDDY ..SHIT FER BRAINS..I GUESS U KNO WHAT HE HAS OR DOESNT...CAUSE U KNOW EVERYTHING...I SURLY DONT, I JUST ASSUMES....POINT IS STILL CLEAR.....FUCK, IM SURE u WOULDNT CALL ME THAT TO MY FACE... BOY, OUT COLD IN ABOUT 1.5 SECONDS KID!