You may wanna consider getting some drip trays and some sort of spacer to keep your containers off the ground, especially if you're using synthetic nutes and watering to runoff. Leaving them on the floor can potentially create issues.Pics
A few pics from a recent transplant. There's no slowdown from transplanting in my experience.
30 days since sprouting, coco in pint-sized grow bags:
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3 days after transplanting to 2 gal fabric pot, first roots poking through.
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1 week after transplanting:
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This is different than my fabric pots, I don't get any roots coming thru my fabric. The fabric is supposed to be self-pruning the roots. Strange.A few pics from a recent transplant. There's no slowdown from transplanting in my experience.
30 days since sprouting, coco in pint-sized grow bags:
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3 days after transplanting to 2 gal fabric pot, first roots poking through.
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1 week after transplanting:
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Your plants look awesomeA few pics from a recent transplant. There's no slowdown from transplanting in my experience.
30 days since sprouting, coco in pint-sized grow bags:
View attachment 5328870View attachment 5328871
3 days after transplanting to 2 gal fabric pot, first roots poking through.
View attachment 5328872
1 week after transplanting:
View attachment 5328873View attachment 5328875
Your plants look awesome
But I am not sure if they would be any different with or without the transplanting method. You grow looks pretty dialed, would be cool if you did a little side by side to prove me wrong. Main reason I go straight to final is to save time spent in the garden but I rethink my game if it has benefits.