EthosEnthusiast
New Member
As the title says,
I'm over here beyond confused to the point I had to come on here due to finding so much conflicting information online and through the multiple resources I've picked up. While I'm not a veteran grower, I would like some input from someone who is familiar with this situation as it applies to autoflowering outdoor females, as it's much different already than working with photoperiods inside. Recently my buddy gave me a vial of some freebies he got from Ethos, a few Fem Auto Chemdawg beans. Did the good old tried and true soaking method (took 12 hours roughly for all 3 to sink) in some natural spring that I have access to and then once they sunk and soaked for about another 2 hours, then I moved them into a papertowel medium inside a glass container keeping them at around 85% humidity, with the towel fairly moist (not damp or wet). However over the course of ~35-40 hours all of these seeds exploded in growth, quicker than I've ever seen my photoperiods come out of their shell - and while 2 of them had about a 0.5-0.75" taproot coming out, the other seed had almost double the length and had slide out of its shell completely and the cotyledons were attempting to unfold and looked a bit yellowed, otherwise the taproot was super solid (albeit very curly) had tons of fuzz.
Now I've never had beans get this big this fast (maybe its the natural spring water here?) so here's a few questions now since this is throwing me off a tiny bit.
When a female autoflower (obviously this is different by strain) is grow outdoors only - just so im prepared if it ever happens again. Should a seed that popped during germination and pulled its own husk off inside the papertowel exposing the cotyledons be planted directly into soil so it can start getting nitrogen? or should I use jiffy pellet and plant it once it roots itself adequately (I had planned on cutting the bottom of the meshing off upon transfer into a soil medium). I understnad this is a generic question and could be different between what soils are used / mediums etc. However, I'd like this tailored toward autoflowering females grow outdoors specifcally
Next, since this new lady now has no shell and coming out of the paper towel into direct sunlight I knew would be too shocking (someone please correct me if I'm wrong here as I don't know the intricacies of autoflowers like that especially when outdoors has so many variables) so I planted it taproot down inside of a smaller 4" pot with a 0.5" layer of perlite on the bottom, and FF Happy Frog (as I've heard OF is far too hot since these guys are supposed to go in their final container from the start but I didn't have one available on such quick notice) and I then lightly pushed the soil back over it so that the cotyledons were sitting just above the soil along with 1cm" under the cotyledon's lowest position, then left them in the shade but outside (~88 in the sun w/ ~75% humidity outside today) - others said this was incorrect to do and that I was supposed to do the following: (please someone confirm if each is appropriate or totally inappropriate)
A: Plant the dehusked germinated sprout from papertowel directly into a jiffy pellet, as they have a much more airy medium than soil and then leave the cotyledons under the petemoss and let them emerge on their own (seemed off to me - but would prevent sunshock I guess?).
B: The same as above - but plant directly into soil (seemed even harder to believe that cotyledons could really benefit more from being in a darker enviroment and also be trying to force their way through a soil/potting mix medium vs petemoss.
C: Plant into a soil/jiffy pot with the cotyledons exposed and 90% of taproot buried (as the entire sprout is all white at this point and no real stalk position can be seen) and then leave it into the sun right after potting (sunshock warnings written all over this despite the cotyledons providing a means of photosynthesis during early growth)
Lastly - in terms of shorter cycle autoflowers grown outdoors at this time of the year with a very warm climate - given this seedlings situation - should I let it rest for another day in the shade before giving it full sunlight? Since it's so humid here soil in the shade takes a very long time to dry and given that the sprout was very wet during the germination state to have grown like it did, I did not want to risk root rot, but I also don't want to stunt the growth since the soil is a little moist and I added a little water around the 3cm ring surrounding the sprout. Sunlight here I know would obviously dry it out but would preferably not like to shock the plant if it needs more time to adjust from just being in a dark paper towel with water to some soil with nutrients and 14+ hours of sunlight.
If you want to include any scientific articles or any unique tips that worked out well for you when you grew your autoflowers outdoors that'd be awesome. Looking forward to hearing some input - also please feel free to point out any errors that you may see with my process I did, if I did in fact make the right choice.
My thanks.
I'm over here beyond confused to the point I had to come on here due to finding so much conflicting information online and through the multiple resources I've picked up. While I'm not a veteran grower, I would like some input from someone who is familiar with this situation as it applies to autoflowering outdoor females, as it's much different already than working with photoperiods inside. Recently my buddy gave me a vial of some freebies he got from Ethos, a few Fem Auto Chemdawg beans. Did the good old tried and true soaking method (took 12 hours roughly for all 3 to sink) in some natural spring that I have access to and then once they sunk and soaked for about another 2 hours, then I moved them into a papertowel medium inside a glass container keeping them at around 85% humidity, with the towel fairly moist (not damp or wet). However over the course of ~35-40 hours all of these seeds exploded in growth, quicker than I've ever seen my photoperiods come out of their shell - and while 2 of them had about a 0.5-0.75" taproot coming out, the other seed had almost double the length and had slide out of its shell completely and the cotyledons were attempting to unfold and looked a bit yellowed, otherwise the taproot was super solid (albeit very curly) had tons of fuzz.
Now I've never had beans get this big this fast (maybe its the natural spring water here?) so here's a few questions now since this is throwing me off a tiny bit.
When a female autoflower (obviously this is different by strain) is grow outdoors only - just so im prepared if it ever happens again. Should a seed that popped during germination and pulled its own husk off inside the papertowel exposing the cotyledons be planted directly into soil so it can start getting nitrogen? or should I use jiffy pellet and plant it once it roots itself adequately (I had planned on cutting the bottom of the meshing off upon transfer into a soil medium). I understnad this is a generic question and could be different between what soils are used / mediums etc. However, I'd like this tailored toward autoflowering females grow outdoors specifcally
Next, since this new lady now has no shell and coming out of the paper towel into direct sunlight I knew would be too shocking (someone please correct me if I'm wrong here as I don't know the intricacies of autoflowers like that especially when outdoors has so many variables) so I planted it taproot down inside of a smaller 4" pot with a 0.5" layer of perlite on the bottom, and FF Happy Frog (as I've heard OF is far too hot since these guys are supposed to go in their final container from the start but I didn't have one available on such quick notice) and I then lightly pushed the soil back over it so that the cotyledons were sitting just above the soil along with 1cm" under the cotyledon's lowest position, then left them in the shade but outside (~88 in the sun w/ ~75% humidity outside today) - others said this was incorrect to do and that I was supposed to do the following: (please someone confirm if each is appropriate or totally inappropriate)
A: Plant the dehusked germinated sprout from papertowel directly into a jiffy pellet, as they have a much more airy medium than soil and then leave the cotyledons under the petemoss and let them emerge on their own (seemed off to me - but would prevent sunshock I guess?).
B: The same as above - but plant directly into soil (seemed even harder to believe that cotyledons could really benefit more from being in a darker enviroment and also be trying to force their way through a soil/potting mix medium vs petemoss.
C: Plant into a soil/jiffy pot with the cotyledons exposed and 90% of taproot buried (as the entire sprout is all white at this point and no real stalk position can be seen) and then leave it into the sun right after potting (sunshock warnings written all over this despite the cotyledons providing a means of photosynthesis during early growth)
Lastly - in terms of shorter cycle autoflowers grown outdoors at this time of the year with a very warm climate - given this seedlings situation - should I let it rest for another day in the shade before giving it full sunlight? Since it's so humid here soil in the shade takes a very long time to dry and given that the sprout was very wet during the germination state to have grown like it did, I did not want to risk root rot, but I also don't want to stunt the growth since the soil is a little moist and I added a little water around the 3cm ring surrounding the sprout. Sunlight here I know would obviously dry it out but would preferably not like to shock the plant if it needs more time to adjust from just being in a dark paper towel with water to some soil with nutrients and 14+ hours of sunlight.
If you want to include any scientific articles or any unique tips that worked out well for you when you grew your autoflowers outdoors that'd be awesome. Looking forward to hearing some input - also please feel free to point out any errors that you may see with my process I did, if I did in fact make the right choice.
My thanks.
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