jswett1100
Well-Known Member
Ive been runnings 5 gallons for a couple indoor harvests my temps and everything are more then fine and lighting but they take forever to dry out! so should i just use 3 gallons? i only veg for 4 weeks.
If you want them to dry out faster, why not add some perlite to your soil mix? It may be just the solution you need, as it'd probably improve growth as well.Ive been runnings 5 gallons for a couple indoor harvests my temps and everything are more then fine and lighting but they take forever to dry out! so should i just use 3 gallons? i only veg for 4 weeks.
I run promix and thats got a good amount of perlite in it.If you want them to dry out faster, why not add some perlite to your soil mix? It may be just the solution you need, as it'd probably improve growth as well.
Keep the pots big, give those roots space to grow!
Adding more perlite will make it hold less water and allow for more air in your mix. @Axle4worc makes a good point too, fabric or air pots could be a great solution to your issue.I run promix and thats got a good amount of perlite in it.
I've been running 5 gallon pots in flower for years for this reason. I get to walk away for days at a time without water worries.Ive been runnings 5 gallons for a couple indoor harvests my temps and everything are more then fine and lighting but they take forever to dry out! so should i just use 3 gallons? i only veg for 4 weeks.
I just started vegging in 1 gallons i was vegging in 2 beforeI've been running 5 gallon pots in flower for years for this reason. I get to walk away for days at a time without water worries.
4 week veg...meh, wasting alot of dirt in a five pail but so what if its not an issue. I veg in one gallon bags and up pot a week or two before initiating flower into five gallon pails.
Plants are bound by root limitations in traditional containers like plastic etc. In fabric pots those guidelines go out the door, it's just a matter of whether you want to water daily or not. These (3 pics) were flowered in 1 gal fabrics and went 9 weeks in flowering, door knob is 37" from the floor. Only pita was watering daily for the last few weeks. From my experience in fabric pots there's no set limit, it's just a matter of how often you want to water.I've heard that each gallon of pot size can support 30 days of growth. So 5 gallon means you could grow up to 20 weeks. Most of my plants finish in pots that are 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 gallon. I do use 3 gallon pots for clone donor moms.
Good luck, BigSteve.
Good info on the fabric pots! Thanks. BigSteve.Plants are bound by root limitations in traditional containers like plastic etc. In fabric pots those guidelines go out the door, it's just a matter of whether you want to water daily or not. These (3 pics) were flowered in 1 gal fabrics and went 9 weeks in flowering, door knob is 37" from the floor. Only pita was watering daily for the last few weeks. From my experience in fabric pots there's no set limit, it's just a matter of how often you want to water.
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These (2) sativas (Panama's) in my current run will take somewhere around 12-13 weeks. My decision to put them in 5 gal fabrics was strictly based on not wanting to water them every other day for 12 weeks.
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Yeah there's a lot of variables too, you're getting more evaporation from the heat under hps. I run under LED's, less heat/evaporation. If you were running fabric pots same size under hps you'd probably lose another day and have to water even more often. For me the fabric pots are worth it though, the root systems fill the pot top to bottom by harvest and that's what we're really growing, strong root systems = big buds.im finding out some weird shit. Like it seems the amount of water run through the plant and the yeild arent correlated. i used to think it was all about the roots and id have issues with being overgrown. its hard to train a closet of huge plants to take full advantage of a little 1000 hps, But 7 gal pots get dry just as fast as 3 gals, the plants in 3 gals have higher bud/leaf ratios. The ones in big pots veg out more and are more thirsty because of all the leaves. = im switching to 3 or 5 gal smartpots instead of the 7 gals I had been using. Theres the occasional plant that can yeild pounds and a 7 gal is good for that.