tripwire911
New Member
ha ha ha love the disclaimer.
ok here is the deal . cloneing them trying to get roots the temp needs to be under 75 or no roots will form or the stem will rot . and veg . it van go as high as 110 f and the plants will grow I like the heat about 90 to 95 f under strong lights they grow super insane fast !. flower. first 5 weeks depending on your strand the temp can be up to 100 f. they will grow fast and happy. ok last 3 weeks of flower you need to keep the temps cooler once the buds start to get big. why ????? because if not mosttttttttt of the time if its hot the buds will be more loose not dense , some people smoke it and tell you its not as strong . this is from my experience . honestly if you can get the temps down around 75f stead late flower or cooler the quality really comes out. show quality stuff. any hotter and its may be ok but in the 90 to 100 quality will suffer greatly. BUTTTT it will grow. so guys grow how ever you want but if your a commercial grower . there is a shit load of completion out there. so you can only grow the best of be stuck with product you can sell and your out of business after your first grow . here in Michigan the quality of this has rose so sharply im very impressed . I see high time quality stuff being sold on the streets for 200 to 300 a zip . so if you flower hot good luck reselling it for over 100a zip the market is tuff ~!!!!! .......................................... legal note . all my posts are related to ghost chilly peppers . past or present posting and if its listed as other then its a total bull shit not true. or made up fiction .
No, the opposite is true, a lower DIF, negative even, reduces stem elongation. This has been tested with both cannabis grows (article at hightimes if I remember correctly) and widely tested by scientists and experts in professional agriculture.It is preferable during flowering to have a night temperature drop of 10-20 degrees to stimulate flowering hormones and reduce stem elongation.
so according to this my plants outside can handle up to 100 farenheit with the high Co2 here in Los Angeles. good to know.Good post Johnny, I'd add rep to the like if I could.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_will_temperature_affect_the_rate_of_photosynthesis#slide=1
No, the opposite is true, a lower DIF, negative even, reduces stem elongation. This has been tested with both cannabis grows (article at hightimes if I remember correctly) and widely tested by scientists and experts in professional agriculture.
For example: http://www.plantphysiol.org/content/138/4/2344.full.pdf
Google 'DIF stem elongation' for plenty of other reliable sources. The point is, an increased difference (positive DIF) between day and night temp as you propose actually causes stem elongation. That unfortunately doesn't mean it reduces stem elongation at low or even zero DIF, but keeping it low DOES prevent the increased stem elongation caused by a too high DIF. Negative DIF (warmer at night than during the day) does reduce the normal stem elongation but is not recommended because it has other downsides.
You're correct about the CO2 though. The amount of CO2 also plays a large role, with more CO2 available (outside) the temps for optimal photosynthesis is much higher.
As with many things it differs per strain (and their origin) as well.
The canoeing is commonly associated with too high temps, "too much heat transfer", I guess you could put it like that. When it's hot and dry it will transpire more water, if it cannot take up enough water and evaps more through its leaves then it can suck up then the water contents in the edges, higher in the plant (further from the roots) drops first.Am I correct when I say the leafs curling on the edges is from too much heat transfer out of the leaf ?
Bit late but mines 85 and doing great just terpenes slowly developed"if the temps reach more than 85 degrees the plant dont grow at all...that is when u find a place with some shade"
lol ok i think hes joking... mine have been 80-98* and they have grown each day. they don't go over 84* now but it was when my venting was bad... but they still grew