Stelthy's 600W Hps Project! (New-Cab)

stelthy

Well-Known Member




Here's my Strawberry Thai she still has some yellowing leaves any help will be rewarded with REP and its NOT over watering or too much nuits! - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member


Here's My Great White Shark She's doing well and still hasn't even consumed 5L of her 1st starter nuits yet :) - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

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Great White Shark just keeps looking better :) .. I have decided to update once a week now.. So every Monday I will update, and this will help show growth rate more clearly - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

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:weed: grow a batch of tomatoes.. get some clones of the GWS and fill that screen out bongsmilie
I am keeping things relativley simple this time around but I may take a clone in a few weeks time, I've not taken a clone before, but I am prepared :) I have a new pack of scalpals and some Clonex rooting gel, a few rockwool cubes and some spare Hydra-clay balls so a clone shouldnt be that hard to do ~ I hope, any tips welcome :) - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member
stelthy- the yellowing is either from the light being too close or not enough nutes if your saying your not overwatering.
Ah... It could be either of those 2.. !!! I've raised the Reflector a couple of inches, and upped her nuits to surgested full strength, I'll wait patiently and hope she fixes her self with these new tips applied :) Cheers man - STELTHY :leaf:
 

SCCA

Active Member
Looks great stelthy! you need to trim those tomatoes a bit. just top them back to a node near the screen. it will slow them down and give your ladies time to catch up. you also should thin those lavender sprouts soon, pull all but 5 or 6 from the pot. do you know what type of tomato that is? they are not photosensitive and fruit based on age. usually 60 to 90 days from planting. you may want to clone it and start over, it will be old enough to fruit and be much smaller. some tomatoes are determinate meaning they produce a bunch of tomatoes in a short period of time then their growth slows. others are indeterminate meaning they produce tomatoes regularly until the plant dies from foul weather, this type of tomato can grow quite large but all you need to do is propagate it and start over when it starts to get too big.
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member
Looks great stelthy! you need to trim those tomatoes a bit. just top them back to a node near the screen. it will slow them down and give your ladies time to catch up. you also should thin those lavender sprouts soon, pull all but 5 or 6 from the pot. do you know what type of tomato that is? they are not photosensitive and fruit based on age. usually 60 to 90 days from planting. you may want to clone it and start over, it will be old enough to fruit and be much smaller. some tomatoes are determinate meaning they produce a bunch of tomatoes in a short period of time then their growth slows. others are indeterminate meaning they produce tomatoes regularly until the plant dies from foul weather, this type of tomato can grow quite large but all you need to do is propagate it and start over when it starts to get too big.
I'll leave the Tomatoes for now as I plan to let them climb the sides of the cab I may hang an Envirolite higher up as and when the fruits begin to appear :) I have never grown Lavender before do you/anyone know how big just the one seedling will get - (When mature)? and also if with the amount I have in my pot pictured above if there's to many seedling's for the size of the pot. Any insightful experienced light shed on the growth of Lavender will be rewarded with REP!

I have the name of the type of Tomatoes they are, But will have to wait a while before its 'lights on' and I can make a note of it. I'll bare in mind what you've said about taking clones but if the Great White Shark grows as fast as it has been I expect the reflector will be raised again within the week - STELTHY :leaf:
 

SCCA

Active Member
well a full sized lavender can be about 5'x5' if left unpruned. most lavender is kept at about 3'x3' with annual pruning, cut all the flowers off when they are fully open, making a nice rounded mound. as far as your seedlings go, when they are just past the cotyledon stage, gently tip the soil out of the pot and carefully separate the seedlings. place 2 or 3 in a pot about the size you have now. in a year or two you should have a decent sized lavender plant. note they can be kept small by applying the same "bonsai" techniques that people apply to their mother plants.
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member



Ok I'll correct myself here, this is a Pepper plant not a Chilli plant lol - my bad! Anyhow she's kinda shaded by the canopy above I'll move her around to try n focus more light in her direction - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member
well a full sized lavender can be about 5'x5' if left unpruned. most lavender is kept at about 3'x3' with annual pruning, cut all the flowers off when they are fully open, making a nice rounded mound. as far as your seedlings go, when they are just past the cotyledon stage, gently tip the soil out of the pot and carefully separate the seedlings. place 2 or 3 in a pot about the size you have now. in a year or two you should have a decent sized lavender plant. note they can be kept small by applying the same "bonsai" techniques that people apply to their mother plants.




Here's the Lavender in question :) I'll take SCCA's advice and repot only a few of these seedling so as not to over crowd the pot and give these flowers a fighting chance - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member
Looks great stelthy! you need to trim those tomatoes a bit. just top them back to a node near the screen. it will slow them down and give your ladies time to catch up. you also should thin those lavender sprouts soon, pull all but 5 or 6 from the pot. do you know what type of tomato that is? they are not photosensitive and fruit based on age. usually 60 to 90 days from planting. you may want to clone it and start over, it will be old enough to fruit and be much smaller. some tomatoes are determinate meaning they produce a bunch of tomatoes in a short period of time then their growth slows. others are indeterminate meaning they produce tomatoes regularly until the plant dies from foul weather, this type of tomato can grow quite large but all you need to do is propagate it and start over when it starts to get too big.


Lol These are the Tomatoes and remarkably they don't specify the type/strain on the packet so your guess is as good as mine! - STELTHY :leaf:
 

stelthy

Well-Known Member


Here's the Mystery Seedling and growing steadily :) She has grown alot faster than the Pepper seedling and has blocked the poor little bugger from getting as much light as I would have liked - STELTHY :leaf:
 
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