What proof?the funny thing is that one of us has proven that he actually does pay taxes here, and it ain't clayton the racist lying ass clown.
UB is a leftie, his views and mine are incompatible.It's ok bro, you can be a UB groupie if that's what you want! LOL
Anyone with half a brain my friend seen right through your spin, don't use growers as a strawman sparky, it only shows your weakness!UB is a leftie, his views and mine are incompatible.
Sorry for supporting actual growers on a cannabis website. I'd watch the preaching tho, there's alot more treadmill salesmen here that are a hell of a lot more coy about what they do.
Wtf are you talking about?Anyone with half a brain my friend seen right through your spin, don't use growers as a strawman sparky, it only shows your weakness!
I see you're still butt hurt about the brown leaf comedy! LOL
You've been trolling me dude, and you'll get what you put out with me.Wtf are you talking about?
The brown leaf thing is because my country is cold and humid, leaves actually stay alive for weeks after you cut them, continuing their natural processes.
Plants arnt people, you can cut bits off them and they stay alive until they run out of "juice".
I wasn't gonna troll you, but your stupid is starting to show.
Cool story bro, but Bucky doesn't live in Ireland, now does he!Wtf are you talking about?
The brown leaf thing is because my country is cold and humid, leaves actually stay alive for weeks after you cut them, continuing their natural processes.
Plants arnt people, you can cut bits off them and they stay alive until they run out of "juice".
I wasn't gonna troll you, but your stupid is starting to show.
I troll everyone sometimes, grow a pair.You've been trolling me dude, and you'll get what you put out with me.
And so nowhere else has high humidity which stops transpiration and causes chlorophyll to break down naturally?Cool story bro, but Bucky doesn't live in Ireland, now does he!
Personally, I don't buy into it bro.And so nowhere else has high humidity which stops transpiration and causes chlorophyll to break down naturally?
now see i didnt want to get into this whole brown leaf flap but i got bundles of basil thyme peppermint and parsley hanging from my rafters and they are NONE of them brown. they are all varying shades of silvery grey-green, dried to perfection and ready for packing and storage for the winter.And so nowhere else has high humidity which stops transpiration and causes chlorophyll to break down naturally?
why not just start handing out participation trophies, you socialist.youre both right
Apoptosis is the process of programmed cell death, does it apply to plants dropping leaves too?now see i didnt want to get into this whole brown leaf flap but i got bundles of basil thyme peppermint and parsley hanging from my rafters and they are NONE of them brown. they are all varying shades of silvery grey-green, dried to perfection and ready for packing and storage for the winter.
a cut or dropped leaf doesnt always turn brown, and it doesnt always stay green
the annual colour change in deciduous trees is NOT a function of the leafs death, but of the process of apoptosis that siphons off the tree's resources from the leaf before it separates and falls at a designated drop point on the stem.
a leaf which turns brown when cut for one person and their climate can easily stay green long after it has lost nearly all it's moisture.
further, the only time i ever seen brown weed is when it is mishandled by a trash compactor while it's still wet. every other bud remains some shade of green to grey after drying and curing.
uv light and dry heat in an outdoor grow in a southern clime could easily result in brown trimmings, while wet dim conditions in indoor trimming could result in leafs that stay green for years on the floor or in the corner.
youre both right
OK Doc diplomat, I'll settle for that! LOLnow see i didnt want to get into this whole brown leaf flap but i got bundles of basil thyme peppermint and parsley hanging from my rafters and they are NONE of them brown. they are all varying shades of silvery grey-green, dried to perfection and ready for packing and storage for the winter.
a cut or dropped leaf doesnt always turn brown, and it doesnt always stay green
the annual colour change in deciduous trees is NOT a function of the leafs death, but of the process of apoptosis that siphons off the tree's resources from the leaf before it separates and falls at a designated drop point on the stem.
a leaf which turns brown when cut for one person and their climate can easily stay green long after it has lost nearly all it's moisture.
further, the only time i ever seen brown weed is when it is mishandled by a trash compactor while it's still wet. every other bud remains some shade of green to grey after drying and curing.
uv light and dry heat in an outdoor grow in a southern clime could easily result in brown trimmings, while wet dim conditions in indoor trimming could result in leafs that stay green for years on the floor or in the corner.
youre both right
There ya go again Herrekin, sorry pal it was UB and Samwell that made this an issue.Apoptosis is the process of programmed cell death, does it apply to plants dropping leaves too?
Also my buds will always stay green, but eventually the little sugar-leaf-stubs turn brown and crispy and fall off.
Its a stupid argument anyways, one Clayton keeps reviving tho.
Bit of a one (yellow) stick pony.
I think all you have proven is that UB can do more damage to weed than a trash compactor...now see i didnt want to get into this whole brown leaf flap but i got bundles of basil thyme peppermint and parsley hanging from my rafters and they are NONE of them brown. they are all varying shades of silvery grey-green, dried to perfection and ready for packing and storage for the winter.
a cut or dropped leaf doesnt always turn brown, and it doesnt always stay green
the annual colour change in deciduous trees is NOT a function of the leafs death, but of the process of apoptosis that siphons off the tree's resources from the leaf before it separates and falls at a designated drop point on the stem.
a leaf which turns brown when cut for one person and their climate can easily stay green long after it has lost nearly all it's moisture.
further, the only time i ever seen brown weed is when it is mishandled by a trash compactor while it's still wet. every other bud remains some shade of green to grey after drying and curing.
uv light and dry heat in an outdoor grow in a southern clime could easily result in brown trimmings, while wet dim conditions in indoor trimming could result in leafs that stay green for years on the floor or in the corner.
youre both right
Are you kidding, Bucky is a legend around these parts, just ask him!I think all you have proven is that UB can do more damage to weed than a trash compactor...
I suppose you grow toilets and flush before harvest too? Plants photosynthesise at their peak with green leaves, your final two weeks contribute up to 20% of your final weight. By not keeping green until harvest you're killing yield. Do you flush your tomatoes before you pick them?There ya go again Herrekin, sorry pal it was UB and Samwell that made this an issue.And anyone that has a damn lick of experience in growing will tell you that you don't add nitrogen to a mature flowering plant (my avatar) you're anger is making a fool out of you now.Some good advice, trying to copy what Bucky says is not a good idea Harrekin, i don't know what the call people like him where you live, around here they're referred to as geeks!
Well Harrekin I don't know were the toilets came from but you are correct about a couple of things. Plants should stay as green as possible barring fan leaves, up until harvest. But you are aware that some strains have less chlorophyll than others and are more apt to turn yellow, right? And as far as weights increasing 20% in the last two weeks, I've had plants almost double in weight in the last three weeks but I won't attribute that to N, I'll give the right balance of P and K that credit.I suppose you grow toilets and flush before harvest too? Plants photosynthesise at their peak with green leaves, your final two weeks contribute up to 20% of your final weight. By not keeping green until harvest you're killing yield. Do you flush your tomatoes before you pick them?
You're not one to talk to me about growing. Iv got my shit down thanks, you try pull 14 ounces off 8 plants under a 400w HPS in soilWell Harrekin I don't know were the toilets came from but you are correct about a couple of things. Plants should stay as green as possible barring fan leaves, up until harvest. But you are aware that some strains have less chlorophyll than others and are more apt to turn yellow, right? And as far as weights increasing 20% in the last two weeks, I've had plants almost double in weight in the last three weeks but I won't attribute that to N, I'll give the right balance of P and K that credit.
Do you agree that during the later stages of flowering the flowers benefit much more from phosphorus and potassium and too much N can delay and even reduce bud size?
I'm not in any way telling you to cut back your amounts of nitrogen after you flip to get better stacking or cut it way back during the later stages and focus on using a balanced amount of P and K. I'm not even going to tell you your nugs will taste much better for doing it, hell everyone has their own way of doing things, that's the beauty of growing.
Although a green healthy vegetative stage is the building block for the optimum harvest, my goal is to grow the biggest, stinkiest and tastiest buds that are genetically possible for the genotype I'm growing, I don't make money on green leaves!