ltecato
Well-Known Member
First of all, before you start laughing and hurt my feelings, allow me to explain that Dr. Feelgood is supposed to be a short, fast-finishing plant.
In April I planted 5 seeds and got the smallish plants I expected, which is cool because I've got no room anyway. Not knowing any better, I started these plants on a 12/12 light cycle almost immediately, but then after checking here I switched to a longer day of 18-20 hours of light, as recommended. The yield ranged between 8 and nearly 15 grams per plant.
So this time I started the crop with a long light cycle, but after looking at an electric bill I decided maybe my LEDs aren't as efficient as I hoped, so I cut the lights back a bit after a couple weeks of growing.
I just got through weighing the third of five plants in my latest crop (planted mid-July indoors) and am now suffering severe butt-hurt because the yield has been roughly 8 grams or less per plant.
Not sure what I did wrong. Too stingy with the ferts, maybe? I only gave them two or three doses of fertilizer because they didn't show any signs of nutrient stress until they were well into flowering. If it matters, I grew 'em in dirt, one-gallon pots.
In April I planted 5 seeds and got the smallish plants I expected, which is cool because I've got no room anyway. Not knowing any better, I started these plants on a 12/12 light cycle almost immediately, but then after checking here I switched to a longer day of 18-20 hours of light, as recommended. The yield ranged between 8 and nearly 15 grams per plant.
So this time I started the crop with a long light cycle, but after looking at an electric bill I decided maybe my LEDs aren't as efficient as I hoped, so I cut the lights back a bit after a couple weeks of growing.
I just got through weighing the third of five plants in my latest crop (planted mid-July indoors) and am now suffering severe butt-hurt because the yield has been roughly 8 grams or less per plant.
Not sure what I did wrong. Too stingy with the ferts, maybe? I only gave them two or three doses of fertilizer because they didn't show any signs of nutrient stress until they were well into flowering. If it matters, I grew 'em in dirt, one-gallon pots.