Do I really have to plant seeds in smaller pots first?

EagleJo

Member
My seeds just cracked and are showing taproot so i was wondering if i can plant them in their big pots now or should i plant them in smaller cups first? Just wondering because it would be much easier for me if I could plant them in their big pots straight away.
Also how deep?

THANKS :D
 

scroglodyte

Well-Known Member
yes........just do it. 1/2 inch is about right.
when ya transplant, ya get a better rootball, and a lot more growth, imo
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
I never transplanted before I tried it last run.

I never will again either, straight into the big pot for me. Id rather my plants can put down roots non-stop than transplant shock 2-3 times.

Hope this helps.
 

Opm

Active Member
The disadvantages to going to a large pot from the start are fertilizer buildup in the unused areas and moisture retention. With adequate flushing the fertilizer buildup can be avoided and with adequate air circulation/humidity control the water retention can be avoided.
 

cmbajr

Active Member
I just use styrofoam cups and after about 2 1/2 weeks of growing I rip the cup carefully keeping the soil around the roots and transplant the to 2 gallon pots... It's a lot easier with styrofoam cups...
 

Carl Spackler

Well-Known Member
The main reason for starting in smaller containers is to avoid over watering (the most common cause of plant death among new growers). Transplant shock is rarely a issue if care is taken while removing the plant from its original container and placing the root-ball at the same depth in the new one. If conditions are optimal with adequate moisture,light and air movement transplant shock is minimal at worst. I've started plants from seed and done both and have yet to see anything resembling anything I would qualify as transplant shock. When starting plants and selecting phenotypes of any particular cultivar, I use small styro-cups to start with simply because I can crowd many plants under a small area and cull out the less hardy/undesirable plants without taking up valuable real estate under the lights.
 

bigv1976

Well-Known Member
When I grew in soil I always started my seedlings in the final pot. The goal indoors is to replicate nature and in nature plants dont get transplanted.
 

sfttailpaul

Active Member
My seeds just cracked and are showing taproot so i was wondering if i can plant them in their big pots now or should i plant them in smaller cups first? Just wondering because it would be much easier for me if I could plant them in their big pots straight away.
Also how deep?

THANKS :D
I grow via Hydroponics but my system is similar. I take cuttings and root them in my home made "Power Clone" machine to which they stay there for 1-2 weeks. I then plant the rooted "clones" into the pot they'll spend the balance of their life in. They Vegetate for 3-4 weeks, get introduced to HID lighting and then grow there until they get +/- 24" tall and then I move this pot (growth pot of a 2 bucket system, Ebb & Grow) into the flowering room. The plants basically start and finish in the same pot saving any form of delay in growth due to shock from transplanting. Due to the fact that I am using clones and flowering them at an earlier time than "natural" , the 2.5 gallon pots are more than adequate for massive root growth and find the root ball to be twofold: 1 at the Hydroton, main mass and 1 down into the reservoir bucket, to which the plants drink at will. Hope this helps.
Oh yea, in a natural setting, seeds are starting and finishing in an "unlimited" sized pot, IE the Mother Earth and UN-limited soil depth and width...
 

Carl Spackler

Well-Known Member
When I grew in soil I always started my seedlings in the final pot. The goal indoors is to replicate nature and in nature plants dont get transplanted.
It may very well be that many growers are trying to recreate the conditions that happen in nature, I would submit that there is little, if anything in a given indoor-grow that is "natural". Considering that Cannabis growing in a outdoor environment has adapted over the eons to grow in a extremely wide range of conditions. Left alone, it tolerates cold,heat,drought,full sun,low light, rich loamy soils, rocky/sandy soils and even excess moisture quite well. If the plant were not inherently tough, it would doubtless have ended up on the scrap heap of plant evolution. In the centuries since man started cultivating and started selectively breeding Cannabis, it bears little resemblance to its original state.
The female flowers that we covet and carefully tend weren't always the thick, resinous, thc/cbd laden nuggets of goodness that the plant originally possessed. This happened because humans valued the psychoactive properties and selectively bred the plant to its current state. For example, take the common practice of exposing the plant to 24hrs./7days/week during the first few weeks of a plants life so that as much vegetative growth as possible prior to flowering. Does this happen in nature? Not on this planet anyway. I hate to get philosophical on this post but it makes me wonder who is really controlling who when it comes to Cannabis cultivation? The plant is given every possible advantage by us to the downright absurd (bottled water anyone?). We will do almost anything to get maximum-yields but in the end it is the plant that actually benefits as it has co-evolved along side us thereby ensuring its ultimate survival.
 

resinousflowers

Well-Known Member
When I grew in soil I always started my seedlings in the final pot. The goal indoors is to replicate nature and in nature plants dont get transplanted.
lol and plants dont grow under HID lights indoors in nature.grow your plants outside if you want to replicate nature.

i think ideally you should put your seedlings into small pots and leave them in there for a few weeks,then transplant into final pots.
 

melungeonman

Active Member
Less transplanting is better,when you can control build up and lock out. I prefer starting in a smaller container for space resons only, With seeds and clones, it's a two or three day process to clone everything, we make buches, when we plant germs, same thing, lots of them. I like to grow both, under florecent lights for a while, and can pack more under them this way on shelfs. But for small groups, by all means put them to bed in the pot they are going to bloom in. Just make shure the salts from your nutes don't get out of control.
 

Keith369

Member
Well finally I've got a perfect place to have knowledge about the plants all the things I think I'd got here because Everyone's seems like so experienced actually I've moved to Bozeman City recently and It's in the main city so that's why I don't get the little nature around the house so Now I wanna plant something at my house's lawn so please guys suggest me for this purpose what should I do?
 
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