Bubbagineer
Well-Known Member
4 KWs ....
I would love for someone to say that about me!bshdctr grows some SUPER tasty herbs under that 4K .... certainly in the top 5% best I've had.
Yes I will be there for 4/20!you still planning on coming up next month?
You just made my week brother. Really, really means a lot to hear that coming from you. I certainly love my girls and it is nice to know that the herb they produce treats others right as well!bshdctr grows some SUPER tasty herbs under that 4K .... certainly in the top 5% best I've had.
I would say this, all plants in veg and early flower are fine to still switch to your preferred times. Anything flowering should just stay on track as is. If you feel über compelled to make the hours right, adjust no more than five minutes per night. That might not cause enough stress to do harm. Can't say I've ever done this, but it's your best chance if you MUST do a gradual transition in light period alteration.So I just did a stupid thing like a dumdum! i got all dabbed out and forgot about daylight savings time! tripped out and unplugged my timer and plugged the ballast straight in, cause i thought it didn't turn on!.my light skedge is 1am to 1pm usually ... What should I do? it got shorted an hour of darkness... I really dont want to have my lights on @ 2am now cause of time change! how could i get myself to 12am cause even 1am was making me tired! could i just turn my lights on @ 12pm and start over with minimum stress? any help from my homies would help? its totally math bro!
1st off, that Lavender looks sick!
If something like this happens to me, I've always just adjusted the next "lights on" cycle down so that the lights click off at the time you want the new "lights off" time to be...even if the plants only received 9-10 hours of light during that one time. Does that make sense? So if you were going 1am lights on to 1pm lights off (now 2am to 2pm), just have the lights on for ten hours from 2am until noon, and then have the lights shut off at noon for the new 12pm-12am night cycle. That way the plants never receive less than 12 hours of darkness, which is what the plants are counting, not the daylight hours. I have not seen hermie problems arise from doing it that way but perhaps other have.
**Oh and for the f*** up that already happened when the plants only got 11 hours of dark, I wouldn't sweat it too much. I've also done this before with no noticeable problems...
loving it bro... i gotta catch up on the thread but shits legit!! they always that dark or are u running some cold temps too?Here are some more Lavender shots I took! I love this girl!View attachment 2564781View attachment 2564779View attachment 2564780View attachment 2564782