Guy in video... he maybe having airflow issues??
There will always be shadows. No matter how much light there is.If light penetration is lacking a grower needs more usable light ....not less plant material.
makes about as much sense as removing some rootball to make room for more roots because the container is too small?
He made an analogy to illuminate his point. Completely on topic. I do believe he is trying to help you.Nobodies talking about root balls. Stay on subject.
No he said it was to open the plant up to more light. Only took off some here and there. I just want to see what those with experience think on that. If you haven't been growing for years......please don't answer. I heard other wise but thought i see the consensus.
The plant was definitely more airy after and and still had a lot of leaves. More light getting down there.
Absolutely, basic plant physiology, I'm in the camp that leaves stay on until they've died off and are spent/useless. Otherwise they stay right until the end if they make it through. Buds don't need light, leaves need light. If you give them enough or the right type of light buds grow all the way down, the lower buds aren't getting a lot of direct light but their leaves are.Plants use their leaves to collect light. This light is turned into energy through a process called photosynthesis. This energy is used to create growth in the plant. By removing leaves you are lessening the amount of energy the plant is producing. Less energy = Less growth
Common practice for increasing yields called defoliation. In the first 14 days of flower during rapid growth due to stretch its fine. Ive never had issues so long as you dont go overboard. Just remove the leaves blocking nodes/budsites.It works well on plants that like to get bushy especially. Look at my C99 posted in the grow your own as an example. Its how I pulled a large yield with low veg time. As for buds not needing light, those leaves at the nodes that become bud sites benefit directlyJust wondering if anyone here removes fan leaves during flowering to allow light to the lower buds? Saw a guy on youtube doing it and wondered about if that was good or not. He pulled perfectly good fan leaves off in an effort to create more light during flowering.
Well I started growing in 1988 and grew until 2002 when my daughter was born. I recently started growing medicinal recently so my thoughts may be outdated but I am speaking from my experience.No he said it was to open the plant up to more light. Only took off some here and there. I just want to see what those with experience think on that. If you haven't been growing for years......please don't answer. I heard other wise but thought i see the consensus.
The plant was definitely more airy after and and still had a lot of leaves. More light getting down there.
For sure I pull off fan leaves during flowering. Sometimes it helps to defoliate with lights off and a headlamp. I can see what leaves are blocking the flower sites I want, and pull any recurring flowers, or missed flower sites. I pull leaves two weeks in to flower, then again some more at week four. At late week six, or the beginning of seven your leaves should be yellowing a bit and ready to abscise I will strip off anything that comes off easily.Just wondering if anyone here removes fan leaves during flowering to allow light to the lower buds? Saw a guy on youtube doing it and wondered about if that was good or not. He pulled perfectly good fan leaves off in an effort to create more light during flowering.