Need some help!

Beachwalker

Well-Known Member
set up an identical pot with your dry medium. as your base for comparison.
you can even put it on a scale and compare your plant/pots to the dry pot baseline weight.
takes all the guess work out of it.
weed likes wet/dry cycles.
Aka the shrubber system as I described above

(I wonder if Jim Minion used to have to go through this?)

Btw you missed the part where he can't pick them up because they're Scrogged in or something
 

Master_Tabi

Well-Known Member
wouldnt it be better to start in a smaller container? With the root ball fully developed into said smaller container after a transplant plants go nuts. Kinda off topic but not really:bigjoint:

I forgot to add that when you plant into large containers you run into the problems you have.
 

Tokintoucan

Active Member
wouldnt it be better to start in a smaller container? With the root ball fully developed into said smaller container after a transplant plants go nuts. Kinda off topic but not really:bigjoint:

I forgot to add that when you plant into large containers you run into the problems you have.
Everything I’ve ever read says to start autos in final pots and have had great success doing so before. Photoperiod plants I would always pot up
 

Tokintoucan

Active Member
Don't believe everything you read online!o_O:bigjoint:

lmao

Do you my guy
Every auto run I’ve done involving transplants has been crap. Always been much better in final pots and have seen some great yields. Even the breeder recommends starting in the final pots and I’m sure they know what they’re doing with their own seeds
 

jtrizzy

Well-Known Member
Every auto run I’ve done involving transplants has been crap. Always been much better in final pots and have seen some great yields. Even the breeder recommends starting in the final pots and I’m sure they know what they’re doing with their own seeds
You're not transplanting right. If you use a solo cup and cut the cup when they are ready to transplant the plant has no idea it was transplanted. Cut the cup vertical and cut the bottom off, use a sharp blade. Take a empty cup and place it in the pot to make the perfect hole to transplant into. Place the cut up cup into the hole, pull out cup, voila perfect transplant every time.
 

Tokintoucan

Active Member
You're not transplanting right. If you use a solo cup and cut the cup when they are ready to transplant the plant has no idea it was transplanted. Cut the cup vertical and cut the bottom off, use a sharp blade. Take a empty cup and place it in the pot to make the perfect hole to transplant into. Place the cut up cup into the hole, pull out cup, voila perfect transplant every time.
I’m not transplanting incorrectly at all I have transplanted loads of photos and don’t have an issue doing it. However it’s common knowledge that autos don’t like it: there is literally no need to transplant an auto.
 
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