With all due respect to the OP....no kidding.Stretched and lanky as hell, imo
Replanted it into a regular pot today and i have it standing straight now, installed some coralite t5s from my old saltwater coral tank (blue and white light) and a fan gently blowing over the top. Checked back on it a couple hours later and the plant is a way nicer shade of green. I do have some more seeds that are germinating and they’re feminized so she should be good. Thanks for all your advice.Certainly looks strong enough, if he replants it deeper and sorts out the lights. I'd try and get the bugger a bit more straight as well, I found that the sticks in sushi rolling mats are perfect for supporting seedlings as they aren't too thick and can be chopped to whatever length needed. And, of course, one rolling mat is hardly expensive so you get a lot of stakes for your buck.
once it grew a little more i planned on adding more dirt because the pot isn’t all the way full just about 3/4 of the way, I have coffee grounds, powdered egg shell and worm castings mixed into it.That soil could have used a little more pearlite in it.Looks like it may pack down hard when it dries out. What kind of nutes you using?
Correct me if i’m wrong but with autos you can leave them on 18/6 for they’re entire life cycle right? I think if i plan on buying some seeds I need to change the blue light that i have to be red later on and ween off the nitrogen that i nute withI ain't saying you MUST do x, y, or z, just that I know how I screwed up so, personally, I'm tempted to stick with photos until I get my own "system" dialled in and then move back to the autos, but this time with seeds that come from a better source than the smartshop I went to in Roosendaal.
Bury the bugger now, it'll grow new roots whereas I'd be worried about shocking it when older, I don't like the thought of the dirt going in too fast and breaking the stem. I take the simple way and put the germinated seed straight into the pot it will finish in so there's no chance I can do any damage with my ham-fisted sausage fingers, others think differently but I believe that the less handling and disturbance the better.once it grew a little more i planned on adding more dirt because the pot isn’t all the way full just about 3/4 of the way, I have coffee grounds, powdered egg shell and worm castings mixed into it.
Correct me if i’m wrong but with autos you can leave them on 18/6 for they’re entire life cycle right? I think if i plan on buying some seeds I need to change the blue light that i have to be red later on and ween off the nitrogen that i nute with
Time to stop with your vast knowledge. I think he's got the point that you think it' needs to be deeper.As I say, I ain't no expert, just passing on experiences from my own screw ups.
Then I'm sure you could make a worthwhile contribution to his questions then.Time to stop with your vast knowledge. I think he's got the point that you think it' needs to be deeper.
What I've always done, and that's with things other than weed, is that I pour enough water around the seedling to keep things moist but also fill the saucer under the pot. As she grows, the roots develop as normal but you also get the water going "up" into the dirt via capillary action so you don't have everything around the plant soaked to death, and it does encourage the roots to go deeper.Its true that putting it in a final spot is better then trying to transplant an auto (as im not auto expert).
But at the same time can be a pain to try to water a seedling in a 3 gallon pot as well.
Been watching newbies like you kill plants for YEARS! No game plan, just stick it in the dirt.Then I'm sure you could make a worthwhile contribution to his questions then.