ttystikk
Well-Known Member
Your approach does indeed make it easier to rotate the plants. I'm still wondering if we're getting anything from the exercise, or just fooling ourselves because it just looks like it.I agree to an extent but being able to rotate depends on the grow method you apply. My last grow was a single (silo) cage approx 12" around the bulbs and my plants growing into the cage. No chance at all of rotating, This time round I have caged each plant individually and the plant grows out of it. I find this very easy to manage and rotating takes all of 2 seconds per plant.I try yo keep the middle of the cage bald for greater air circulation and tie back any unruley growth outside the cage, This is giving me a perfect cylinders of growth, uniform growth and very easy to maintain. I can also move branches about during the early stages to maximise light use and stop branches encroaching on each others light making training very easy. It also makes for easy management of a perpetual system.
I wasn't happy with my own results of rotating, so I built a system that takes full advantage of being trellised and shaped instead of using rotation.