this will all be grown in organic soil with either 2 or 3 gallon grow bags you think it might work????? ......
I wouldn't do soil. Heavy, messy, much less productive than flood hydro.
1) You mentioned that you top your mothers - what height do you do this and do you do it regularly (during every regeneration of the mother)?
I don't really aim for any specific height to trim the mums back to. It's usually a battle to cut them down
severely enough so that they're not growing into the mums' 400 HPS in 15 days' time, when I'll next need a batch of cuttings. Have a look at
this thread I did about cloning. Gives some idea on how to handle pruning mums.
Beyond snipping all growing tips remaining after doing a batch of cuttings, I do cut back woody mainstem growth on 'older' mums (more than about 6-8 wks) to force the mum to sprout branches from lower down on the plant, if only to keep the plants from getting too tall.
Eventually, the older mums' woody mainstems make the plant too tall to allow sufficient fresh growth to provide cuttings, while staying out of the light. I thank the old mums for all the great clones- and put them unceremoniously in the compost. My veg patch out back yums up composted cannabis plant waste quite happily. I put at least 2-3kg of cannabis trimming waste in the compost every time I do a pass of cuttings and harvest a tray. Totally gone in 7-10 days, depending on temperature. I just may have the happiest compost worms on earth.
2) I have read through your thread a few times and the set up that excites me is a DWC with your method. I found container on the web that illustrates my idea:
If I used 4 of these, one per phase and also 1 for the mothers - I think that would be a decent set up for the small-medium grower as you could influence each stage exclusively. My question regarding this set up is about the nutes. I read somewhere that you have to use a lower nute ppm for DWC as the roots are in contact with the water all the time. Is this true and if so - what ppm should I use for the stages you use?
Very well spotted. If ever there was a practical way to do a DWC/aero SoG, I think you've found it. O2 to the roots is the name of the game and eliminating non-O2 bearing media, as this tub system would do, is the only way forward. DWC/aero maximises O2 contact with roots and thus productivity.
I've considered ways of doing an aero or DWC SoG in the past but always found it too complex in terms of daily usage as well as limits on plant mobility. Plants in this system you picture won't be quite as mobile as they are in pots of media as rootmasses will eventually knit. I like to be able to pick up plants and move them around in their trays from time to time to allow slower performers to be in more preferential light positions as well as to have full access to all sides of the plant for spraying, etc.
If I ran a tub system like this as a DWC, I'd probably use a master nutrient tank and plumb water lines to each tub, to make bi-weekly nute dumps easier. You'd only have to dump the master tank, perhaps flush the system with pH 5.5-5.8 water before mixing up a new master tank of nutes. I'd also put air stones/bubble curtains in the master and plant tubs.
It could run as an aero if the tubs were tall enough to allow the roots to hang in the mist over the water level yet allow sufficient space for a decent amount of water capacity. 6 plants will suck up 6-10 litres per day depending on level of development. Mist from a bubble curtain in the tub will do fine. Aero systems which make their mist by forcing water through spray apertures are prone to failure through clogging of their sprayers with nute salts unless cleaned AT LEAST every 2 days.
When an air pump fails in DWC, roots will very quickly die. When an air pump fails in an aero system, the plants will wilt, also within a few hours. Aero or DWC systems should have redundant air pumps- and you should keep spares on hand. Air pumps always quit on holiday weekends.
You have to remember, I'm a lazy frickin' stoner. I use the flood system because it's dead-set easy, doesn't require frequent cleaning and has some failsafes. Flood systems using absorbent media can get plants through a couple of days when a pump has failed and I haven't looked in on the op, as I am prone to do and as often happens with cheap aquarium pumps...
Nute strength in DWC won't be too different to flood, aim for 1400ppm, pH around 5.5-5.8. DWC systems seem to like some added Mg so chuck in about a teaspoon of Epsom Salts per 100L of tank volume when you mix up a fresh tank of nutes every second week.
Have a go. I think you'll find it a bit fiddly in the long term, but it'll grow some nice plants.