looking droopy

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member
well cleaning the old paint out of that 5 gallon bucket real good and knocking a few drain holes in the bottom will work, then take the bucket (if the holes are big enough to keep you from carrying dirt, they are too big) and a shovel out to the woods and get you some dirt from under a big leafy tree (not a pine needley tree)

dig down good, and get loose dark soll from a few inches under the surface, bust up the chunks to make it smooth, then top it off with some of the leafy loamy stuff from the bottom of natural leaf piles. stir it all together then fill your bucket and walk home. when you get home repot your plant by digging out (and saving) the excess dirt from the bucket intill it looks like the whole pot you are using will fit in the hole.

wet the whole bucket of dirt down well, dont make mud, just make it damp. a little water should come out the holes in the bottom.

grab your plant at the base of the main stem and lay the pot on its side. tap the pot all around to loosen the plant and it's root ball, then slowly but firmly pull the pot untill it drags away from the plant (dont drag sluggo, drag the pot)

massage sluggo's roots to losen em up. they will look like a bird's nest at the bottom. once the roots are opened up a little and your rootball no longer has a distinctly pot-shaped form (but do it quickly, no more than a 5 minutes out of the dirt) put sluggo in her new home

bury her root ball all the way to the top of the stem, if the stem/root junction is higher than the bucket top, pull her out digg a little deeper and put her back in.

water her in really good, till water drains out of the bottom of the pot

give plain water around the edge of the pot (dont water the plant, water the bucket) then water normally. with a really deep bucket sticking a fingerr in doesnt work no more, so you gotta pick up the bucket to judge water content by weight.

when you carriy the dirt back from the woods the bucket will weight maybe 20 pound at most, when well watered it should weigh almost double. when the bucket feels light water sluggo's dirt real good (remember youre watering dirt, not the plant, the plant will water itself from wet dirt)

no nutrients for at least a week let sluggo reach for the fresh dirt

the holes in the bottom of the bucket should be about 1/2 inch, and there should be at around 5 of them evenly spaced . 4 around the outside edge of the bucket 1 in the center.
 

atidd11

Well-Known Member
well cleaning the old paint out of that 5 gallon bucket real good and knocking a few drain holes in the bottom will work, then take the bucket (if the holes are big enough to keep you from carrying dirt, they are too big) and a shovel out to the woods and get you some dirt from under a big leafy tree (not a pine needley tree)

dig down good, and get loose dark soll from a few inches under the surface, bust up the chunks to make it smooth, then top it off with some of the leafy loamy stuff from the bottom of natural leaf piles. stir it all together then fill your bucket and walk home. when you get home repot your plant by digging out (and saving) the excess dirt from the bucket intill it looks like the whole pot you are using will fit in the hole.

wet the whole bucket of dirt down well, dont make mud, just make it damp. a little water should come out the holes in the bottom.

grab your plant at the base of the main stem and lay the pot on its side. tap the pot all around to loosen the plant and it's root ball, then slowly but firmly pull the pot untill it drags away from the plant (dont drag sluggo, drag the pot)

massage sluggo's roots to losen em up. they will look like a bird's nest at the bottom. once the roots are opened up a little and your rootball no longer has a distinctly pot-shaped form (but do it quickly, no more than a 5 minutes out of the dirt) put sluggo in her new home

bury her root ball all the way to the top of the stem, if the stem/root junction is higher than the bucket top, pull her out digg a little deeper and put her back in.

water her in really good, till water drains out of the bottom of the pot

give plain water around the edge of the pot (dont water the plant, water the bucket) then water normally. with a really deep bucket sticking a fingerr in doesnt work no more, so you gotta pick up the bucket to judge water content by weight.

when you carriy the dirt back from the woods the bucket will weight maybe 20 pound at most, when well watered it should weigh almost double. when the bucket feels light water sluggo's dirt real good (remember youre watering dirt, not the plant, the plant will water itself from wet dirt)

no nutrients for at least a week let sluggo reach for the fresh dirt

the holes in the bottom of the bucket should be about 1/2 inch, and there should be at around 5 of them evenly spaced . 4 around the outside edge of the bucket 1 in the center.
There no edge on a bucket lol but other than that he nailed that shit! BAM! Right on the dome
 

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member
There no edge on a bucket lol but other than that he nailed that shit! BAM! Right on the dome
when you look at the bottom of the bucket there sure is an edge, the rim of the disc which forms the bottom, where it joins to the sides that make up the main cylinder.

but everybody knew that already.
 

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member
A Dr what's these leaf stuff you speak of??
when deciduous trees dump their leaves in the fall the leaves pile up under the tree acting as a natural mulch. as the leaves decompose the form a thick rich layer of dark black nutrient rich compost called loam. this stuff is light fluffy, very absorbent, and full of all the shit plants crave.

when an old tree dies, the loam is the rich soil that lets new plants grow in the area the tree vacated. loam is part of the reason jungle and forest soils are so fertile when you chop down the trees.

for your purposes the loam will relieve the thick claylike dirt, hold water, increase air flow and allow roots to penetrate the soil. it's natural compost. without loam or other compost materials your dirt would turn into a brick in the pot.
 

Alexander Supertramp

Well-Known Member
That looks to be at least a 1 gallon pot or so. And 16oz of water is not near enough for a pot that size. I doubt its root bound, more like dry spots in the medium causing root damage. Antagonistic situation is what its called in the horticultural world.You need to water until you get nice runoff from the bottom of the pot. Dry spots in the medium can be very hard to reclaim during a grow. A few drops of bio degradable dish soap per gallon of water will work as a wetting agent and help some. I would slowly pour a 1/2 gallon or so of water into the pot. Wait 20-30 minutes and pour another 1/2 gallon of so of water into the pot. Do this each time you water for a week or so and you may reclaim some of those dry spot.
 
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