Nitegazer
Well-Known Member
Last night I flushed the ladies with water, to make sure salts are not setting up shop around those pretty roots. I sighed some relief that I was finally done with training under the screen, was all ready to chill, and then remembered the most labor intensive part of flowering with SCROG.
It's not training under the screen; it's cleaning up all the leaf litter as the ladies ripen. The humidity is getting high in the cabinet (up to 80%). Temps are fairly high for mold or mildew to develop, but I need to keep all dead matter out of the space, lest disease rear its ugly head. Now that the buds are set above the screen, much of the foliage is fading below the screen.
So far, things look healthy:
As things look today, I really like Plant #3. The internodes are spaced a bit farther apart (might be more sativa), and the girl keeps branching like crazy. Here is a photo of Plant #3 and Plant #1 for comparison.
I can't even see the damn internodes on the lower part of Plant#3. Plant #3 is also a bit more lush, though she seems a bit more sensitive to Ph (a possible trait from the Blueberry). Last night's watering was as low as I have gone (5.2), and Plant #3 was the only one that curled its leaves a bit.
In case your wondering why I went down to a ph of 5.2, it's because there has been some debate about the best Ph for a Promix passive hydro setup. Most folks agree on 5.8, but I have read good arguments for 5.2-6.2. I thought it best to experiment with plain water, instead of nutes. I'll go back to a ph of 5.8 for the next feeding.
One other note: the biggest complaint I have read about Fox Farm nutes, is that they neglect nitrogen in the flowering cycle (npk 2-8-4). Fortunately, CalMag provides 2 parts nitrogen, so if I include it while flowering, I will have 4-8-4, which seems a bit better.
It's not training under the screen; it's cleaning up all the leaf litter as the ladies ripen. The humidity is getting high in the cabinet (up to 80%). Temps are fairly high for mold or mildew to develop, but I need to keep all dead matter out of the space, lest disease rear its ugly head. Now that the buds are set above the screen, much of the foliage is fading below the screen.
So far, things look healthy:
As things look today, I really like Plant #3. The internodes are spaced a bit farther apart (might be more sativa), and the girl keeps branching like crazy. Here is a photo of Plant #3 and Plant #1 for comparison.
I can't even see the damn internodes on the lower part of Plant#3. Plant #3 is also a bit more lush, though she seems a bit more sensitive to Ph (a possible trait from the Blueberry). Last night's watering was as low as I have gone (5.2), and Plant #3 was the only one that curled its leaves a bit.
In case your wondering why I went down to a ph of 5.2, it's because there has been some debate about the best Ph for a Promix passive hydro setup. Most folks agree on 5.8, but I have read good arguments for 5.2-6.2. I thought it best to experiment with plain water, instead of nutes. I'll go back to a ph of 5.8 for the next feeding.
One other note: the biggest complaint I have read about Fox Farm nutes, is that they neglect nitrogen in the flowering cycle (npk 2-8-4). Fortunately, CalMag provides 2 parts nitrogen, so if I include it while flowering, I will have 4-8-4, which seems a bit better.