I'm using some jiffy potting "soil" it says it has plenty of nutes but just to be sure I've been watering with a quarter strength fert. The soil is almost 100% vermilicite or how ever you spell it, it retains water like a sponge and I think the roots like how easy it is to expand through because I've been noticing some great root development over the past few days.purple stems are normal. before telling you to add nutrients, what soil are you growing in? the soil may have plenty of nutes alreay, that plant is just starting to utilize nutrients in soil.
the purple stem really isnt a indication of anything at the stage your plants are in, maybe if they were much bigger it would be but right now its not.
Really? That's great news with the short seasons of the northeast I have to deal with. I thought for sure it was saliva but I'm not that experienced, Thanks!With a plant that small your purple stems are defenitely genetic. I find more indica or indica Dom. Plants exibit purple stems.
Almost every plant ive grown has had purple stems in the beginning, then slowly turns green as it gets thicker. I have a feeling it's just a seedling thing. My. Lower stem (before the cotyledons) is green. Just the new extending stem between nodes. Also the new stem growth is thicker than the base closesest to the soil.I'm growing a self-bred Master Kush/Acupolto Gold hybrid, and I have a few phenotypes, but the strongest in my particular genetic line I work with is by far the purple stems... It's usually genetics that are the culprit, if u run a well-rounded gig, and keep your NPK ratios in check... I think it's got something to do with the strong Indica background myself... As most of the Indica strains, like the crystal-laden purps Ive grown before, kindof tend to exhibit purple in some form or another, whether it's mainly the calyxs, or the stigmas, or the leaves(not due to cold environs), or the purple stem thing... It is pretty common... I used to think it meant something really special, but I can't say that I still see it that way, although it is nice to look at-on a healthy plant, and not on one with a deficiency...