Well I would consider changing the medium IF I was going to continue to use the bags....BUT....I just checked the root ball in my 2-gallon plastic garden pot (one of the males) and the roots are very healthy. I would say they look healthier than the roots did when I was using the same medium in the bags. Sooooo.. for me, I think the old school plastic pots works best.Maybe you need to reconsider what medium you're using
This is a 2 gallon plastic pot with ProMix HP, feed is AN, light is 600w MH/HPS, Early Miss Auto. Yield was 13.2 oz.
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Cheers
I would say that I agree that, without good genetics, there's no way to grow good weed. However, I think that, once that's established, then it becomes a matter of which growing technique/medium is going to work for a given grower/environment. Some people can get much better results in grow bags than what I can get, regardless of the genetics.Yes it all comes down to Genetics
I agree well put !!!!I would say that I agree that, without good genetics, there's no way to grow good weed. However, I think that, once that's established, then it becomes a matter of which growing technique/medium is going to work for a given grower/environment. Some people can get much better results in grow bags than what I can get, regardless of the genetics.
I use 2 gal pots in a 3x3 with no issuesOkay so here's my dilemma...I started 8 seeds 35 days ago....One fizzled out right away...Then I was at 7 plants...I just noticed what is likely a male pre-flower on one of the remaining 7 plants...so IF it turns out to me a male, then it will also be culled. Now, I'm down to 6 plants and some of them have yet to show sex...which might lead to even fewer plants.
I initially wanted to do a kind of "Sea Of Green" concept and grow more plants -but in smaller containers. I decided on eight 2-gallon plastic garden pots in my 3 X 3 tent. I had been using 3 gallon grow bags in the past, but I could never keep the outer perimeter of the soil moist enough, so the root ball always suffered. I figured the 2 gallon plastic garden pot would keep ALL the soil evenly moist by comparison, giving me about the same actual root mass as a 3 gallon grow bag.... so that was my rationale behind the 2 gallon pot size.
BTW, I have two plants that are from feminized seed, so that's a sure thing, but all the other strains are regs -some of them are yet-to-be-determined as far as sex. Now that I'm facing potentially ending up with even fewer plants, I'm debating on either starting some more seeds to try and make up for the deficit, and repotting the females into larger containers -which would increase the yield and keep me on-schedule, but wouldn't give me the variety I'm after. I have to make a decision pretty soon.
Has anyone had a successful grow in 2 gallon size pots? Or, is that size just too small?
I threw mine out too, my shit never needed adjustment after gh trioCurrent grow in 3gal bags of organic soil....plants are all at 4'
I water/feed once/day, big fan of humic acid after first few weeks..... never ph anything, threw my ph pen in the trash.
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A disagree with pot size determining size of plant to a degree.....and most others on this thread have too. Now a solo cup is not going to produce a 3# plant...but once over the 2gal mark I would say it doesn't matter.Right, you can grow out of a crack in the sidewalk but is it optimal? No
The bigger the pot the bigger the yield. If you are yielding well in two gallons imagine what 5 gallons will do..
Also if you are having decent results not adjusting pH, imagine the results you would have adjusting the pH..it is well well worth it to dial the grow.
Oh it certainly does matter what the pot size is. We shall have to agree to disagree on that one.
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I've actually tinkered with pot size the past few years. Growing in coco, with a ~35 day veg cycle, I've noticed no difference between growing in 1 gal, 2 gal, 3 gal, or even 5 gal. The main difference is the fertigation frequency. I'm currently running "2 gal" (1.5 gal in reality) pots and use 5 irrigation cycles.The bigger the pot the bigger the yield. If you are yielding well in two gallons imagine what 5 gallons will do..
Been growing almost 40 yrs I have never owned a ph pen I have used swamp water, river water, well water, rain water never phed anything in my life. Heres some swamp grown mega crop an nasty swamp watr.Agreed and then it is too late, time has been lost, end product suffers.
What I was saying your plants can't holler hey! I'm about to use extra mag and it's not available, my ph is a few points off but my grower human doesn't know so I'll sit here and sulk.
Each setback affects the final product. Eliminate setbacks makes for better finished product. Ask any seasoned growers and they will have an IPM and the environment, nutrients and pH dialed to a T.
... And the ph'ing takes an extra what? 2 minutes max?