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  1. BluntMoniker

    Accidental reveg 8 weeks into flower

    Pot growing is all opinions and experience for the most part, with a bit of guessing. That's why everyone answers will be different depending on the subjectiveness of the topic. As far as regaining lost foliage, don't worry about it. Unless you have NO leaves, you have plenty of leaves. Just...
  2. BluntMoniker

    ready to top ?

    Plants look perfectly fine. Just remember, with pot (and likely most things in life) less is more. Your better to under water and under feed, than to over do either. If your unsure about watering, stick your finger litterally as deep into the soil as you can (i go down to the knuckle). If you...
  3. BluntMoniker

    Sick plant please help identify what may of caused this.

    Keep the nugs from both plants separate, then come back here and let us know what you think of each. I dont want to skew your perception by saying this, but I grew a white widow plant, harvested and had nugs in jars. Then I had a clone of that same plant and I accidently fried her with 9.0...
  4. BluntMoniker

    ready to top ?

    You dont need to pull the leaves. The new tops will be growing from a 90° to where the leaves are. They won't be blocked by the 2 top leaves very much, if at all.
  5. BluntMoniker

    Sick plant please help identify what may of caused this.

    Id second over feeding. First of all, the charts that come with your nutruents are guesstimates at best, and the company will always air on the side of "more is better" because that helps line their pockets. So you always need to start low and slowly work your way up. This way, you can stop...
  6. BluntMoniker

    logic behind photoacclimation?

    Did you really quote me after I asked you not to? What a jebroni Sun moves, light intensity/angle of the sun changes, DLI/ppfd reaching plant changes (lowers) accordingly... you said this yourself. Of course, the suns grow season is longer, but thats where the "money" comes in... they want max...
  7. BluntMoniker

    CURING FOR THE FIRST TIME QUESTION

    Regardless of if it was harvested too early or not (I harvest indicas at about 75 days so you were probably fine there), the hay smell comes from drying too quickly. To truly remove the green smell, you need at LEAST a full week of dry time before jarring, more if possible. What you havs now...
  8. BluntMoniker

    Refrigerated clones?

    Id assume the plant would react much in the same way flowers do. And now having made that correlation, here is a good read on how they store flowers commercially for wholesale, which may give some good tips/tricks to increase longevity of your cuts...
  9. BluntMoniker

    Unsure what's happening

    Ok, so here's what I ended up doing so you dont make the same mistakes... Give it a FULL 10-14 days without food. Dont skimp here... if it is overfertilized, there will be plenty of nutruents in the root zone. I skimped out here, only waited like 5 days and thought I'd be fine... i was wrong...
  10. BluntMoniker

    Unsure what's happening

    I have personal experience with biobizz... i burned my plants several times. How often are you feeding? There's a genuinely fine line between too much and not enough. Its an "organic" fertilizer based in beet sugar, but its not processed as quickly by the plant as an inorganic chelated fert. Id...
  11. BluntMoniker

    Dimming the light for part of the cycle?

    A lot of people will start with their dimmers lowered during the seedling stage, and slowly work their way up to max output during late veg into early flower. I wouldn't suggest dimming it up and down daily. But dimming it up/down to better fit the life cycle stage of the plant is perfectly fine
  12. BluntMoniker

    Unsure what's happening

    When did this first appear and how long has it been going on? What is your water pH? What medium are you using? What nutrients are you using?
  13. BluntMoniker

    logic behind photoacclimation?

    You said they lower light intensity towards the end of flower, then say they don't change the light intensity to match the sun, because the sun lowers in light intensity towards the end of the growing season. Your talking yourself in circles. If you think its something other than the obvious...
  14. BluntMoniker

    flower yellowing?

    Yes, and yes. It kind of resembles foxtailing, except the new growth doesn't HAVE to come from the top of a bud. It can come from the sides as well. In fact, I found, depending on the orientation of the bud you can manipulate where the new growth forms (likely due to auxins). New growth comes...
  15. BluntMoniker

    logic behind photoacclimation?

    I'm using critical thinking. The only 2 reasons to do it, would be to replicate the sun's intensity across a grow season in an effort to mimic the plants natural grow environment... or financial planning. Out of those 2 options, which one sounds the most likely to be the case? It could be...
  16. BluntMoniker

    flower yellowing?

    I missed this part when I originally read your thread, I went from 12/12 straight to 18/6, then a week later up to 20/4 (was getting impatient waiting for veg to happen). Then back to 12/12. I was in veg, flowered for 3 weeks, vegged for 3 weeks, then back to flower. I'll have to try it with...
  17. BluntMoniker

    Accidental reveg 8 weeks into flower

    https://www.rollitup.org/t/the-reveg-corner.1022371/post-15775405 I made a post here about my current grow where I intentionally reveg my plant. Theres some close ups of buds/calyxes that show you what revegging looks like. It took a full 2 weeks of 18+ hour a day light before any visible...
  18. BluntMoniker

    Accidental reveg 8 weeks into flower

    23 hours of light one time? Or 23 hours of light for a week or 2? If it was just 23 hours once, no noticeable change will occur in its growth. If it were 23 hours of light daily for a week or more, you'd be looking at a couple extra weeks on your harvest time
  19. BluntMoniker

    Lava rock and pumice shouldnt be this hard and expensive to find

    Use crushed oyster shell. Can get big bags of it at feed stores or tractor supply for cheap. Its sold as chicken "grit", will add the aeration you want, AND provide calcium/pH buffering as it breaks down over the years.
  20. BluntMoniker

    Vermiculite vs Perlite

    Check your local feed store for crushed oyster shell (also called oyster grit, used for chickens). Its cheap and should do roughly the same job as perlite by providing air pockets Added bonus, over a long time it will release trace amounts of calcium. And I mean a long time... so if your not...
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