doublejj's next big adventure....Lone Oak Farms 2016

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Food for thought.
When a plant changes into flower, vegetation and root growth slow and stop.
Does flipping them indoor and then transplanting defeat the transplant or hinder possible yield as opposed to transplanting and then transitioning to flower and letting them grow into the new pot for the first two weeks of transition and the stretch ?
A lot of what we are doing is dictated by when we must have the harvest finished, to re-plant the next round by mid may....if we wait until we plant them out, flowering will be delayed by another week...these plants should still double/triple in size
 
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nuggs

Well-Known Member
Food for thought.
When a plant changes into flower, vegetation and root growth slow and stop.
Does flipping them indoor and then transplanting defeat the transplant or hinder possible yield as opposed to transplanting and then transitioning to flower and letting them grow into the new pot for the first two weeks of transition and the stretch ?
I agree but you better have room to let them finish. it's going to slow them down as it produces bigger and better.
 

TWS

Well-Known Member
A lot of what we are doing is dictated by when we must have the harvest finished, in order to re-plant the next round by mid may....if we wait until we plant them out, flowering will be delayed by another week...these plants should still double/triple in size
Very true. It would be good but maybe not possible to transplant indoors to finish pot , flip and then move out . Maybe 20 or so . Thats alot of work.
I need to call my boss tomorrow.
 
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