I am in a bit of a predicament right now, and I have been looking for an answer but have been unable to find one. I hope you guys can help me out.
I apologize in advance, because my thread will have a lot of questions.... So please don't continue reading if you don't want to carefully understand my situation, I am not looking for half assed answers from people that only read the first two sentences of my issue. I understand why you would not care, no obligation here!
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I have 2 plants (30 days since they popped their heads out of the soil) that are really stunned. For simplicity purposes, the bigger plant is plant A and the smaller plant is Plant B. The good news is that hey are photoperiods, so I can fix them.
Plant B is stunned mostly due to improper watering technique and plant A mostly due to lackluster drainage/aeration. The drainage/aeration isn't absolutely critical, but it definitely could be better. I know this because I watered Plant A 4 days ago and it is still not fully dry.
Last time I watered Plant A, the top of the soil was dry after 4 days, but perhaps it was still moist lower in the soil, so when I watered it again it compacted and dampened the soil even more. That's my hypothesis. I believe this because the plant is bigger now, and logically would consume equal or more water. Since it is more moist this time around after the same period of time (4 days after watering), that is why I believe my soil/perlite mix is not as efficient in Plant A as Plant B.
Now that you understand that situation, this is where I am confused about a couple of topics:
TOPIC 1: Nutrients/Top Feeding
1) The nutrients in Happy Frog soil are supposed to last 30 days, and the cannabis seed itself has 2 weeks of nutrients... so in theory, it should be 6 weeks before top feeding? However, some people suggest you can start feeding after 2 weeks.
2) How does a stunned plant change the nutrient schedule? For example, my plant is 30 days old but in the body of a 10-14 day old plant (hypothetical).
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TOPIC 2: Transplant, Feed, Let it be
I am using slow releasing organic fertilizers: Gaia 4-4-4 All Purpose Fertilizer, Gaia 2-8-4 Power Bloom, and Gaia 2-0-0 EWC.
So since I don't know how to interpret the situation with my soil and it's nutrient availability, I am in a predicament...
1) Do I leave Plant A in it's current pot (0.57 gallon/2.17 Liter) where the soil does not have great, but not absolutely critically damaging soil? As the plant grows and the roots grow, they will consume more water and perhaps that issue will solve itself over time? I suspect my plant's roots have not formed a solid enough base to transplant to a 5 gallon pot.
NOTE: Transplant would have to happen after this watering, as I need to let the plants recover from the FIM.
I just FIMmed them today. Plant A on the 6th node, Plant B on the 4th node. Both plant are the same age, but Plant B was affected more by the poor watering technique, amongst other things.....(spilled the pot over 3x, don't ask )
It is worth mentioning that Plant B is drying out faster than Plant A now, and I can feel the noticeable difference in the soil compaction. This is why I am sure it is a drainage issue on Plant A. I guess my whole thread is MOSTLY tailored for Plant A, but partially for Plant B. What I mean by this is, my small plant won't be transplanted yet as it is not bad with drainage.... but should I fertilize it?
All other questions on my thread definitely apply to the big plant.
If I confused you, please let me know... I'm sorry. I tried to proof read and make sure everything made sense from an outsiders perspective. Thank you all in advance!
I apologize in advance, because my thread will have a lot of questions.... So please don't continue reading if you don't want to carefully understand my situation, I am not looking for half assed answers from people that only read the first two sentences of my issue. I understand why you would not care, no obligation here!
-------------------------
I have 2 plants (30 days since they popped their heads out of the soil) that are really stunned. For simplicity purposes, the bigger plant is plant A and the smaller plant is Plant B. The good news is that hey are photoperiods, so I can fix them.
Plant B is stunned mostly due to improper watering technique and plant A mostly due to lackluster drainage/aeration. The drainage/aeration isn't absolutely critical, but it definitely could be better. I know this because I watered Plant A 4 days ago and it is still not fully dry.
Last time I watered Plant A, the top of the soil was dry after 4 days, but perhaps it was still moist lower in the soil, so when I watered it again it compacted and dampened the soil even more. That's my hypothesis. I believe this because the plant is bigger now, and logically would consume equal or more water. Since it is more moist this time around after the same period of time (4 days after watering), that is why I believe my soil/perlite mix is not as efficient in Plant A as Plant B.
Now that you understand that situation, this is where I am confused about a couple of topics:
TOPIC 1: Nutrients/Top Feeding
1) The nutrients in Happy Frog soil are supposed to last 30 days, and the cannabis seed itself has 2 weeks of nutrients... so in theory, it should be 6 weeks before top feeding? However, some people suggest you can start feeding after 2 weeks.
2) How does a stunned plant change the nutrient schedule? For example, my plant is 30 days old but in the body of a 10-14 day old plant (hypothetical).
- Would my plant have used up 2 weeks of happy frog, or all 4 weeks already - even if it hasn't grown to the size that a 30 day old plant would grow to?
- Would it have only used its 2 weeks worth of nutrients, and it still has 4 weeks of happy frog nutrients left?
--------------
TOPIC 2: Transplant, Feed, Let it be
I am using slow releasing organic fertilizers: Gaia 4-4-4 All Purpose Fertilizer, Gaia 2-8-4 Power Bloom, and Gaia 2-0-0 EWC.
So since I don't know how to interpret the situation with my soil and it's nutrient availability, I am in a predicament...
1) Do I leave Plant A in it's current pot (0.57 gallon/2.17 Liter) where the soil does not have great, but not absolutely critically damaging soil? As the plant grows and the roots grow, they will consume more water and perhaps that issue will solve itself over time? I suspect my plant's roots have not formed a solid enough base to transplant to a 5 gallon pot.
- If I do leave it in it's current pot. Should I start adding some fertilizer mix or not? Quarter of the suggested dose.
NOTE: Transplant would have to happen after this watering, as I need to let the plants recover from the FIM.
- I guess I would not need to fertilize the plant since FFOF has nutrients already? What if the plant is being transplanted to FFOF now that is older and can handle more nutrients? Would it still be too hot, or do people restrain from amending FFOF because they use the soil for young seedlings too?
- Should I layer it instead? Bottom 2/3rds use the mix mentioned above, but the top 1/3rd brand new happy frog soil with perlite to ease the plant in?
- If I don't layer it and go with all FFOF; should I amend it near the bottom 3rd of the pot? Hoping that when the roots reach there it's flowering time.
- I was considering amending the FFOF and letting it cook for a couple of weeks at least, but I did quite a bit of research and it seeems like general consensus is that it would be too hot if I amend it. It's best just to top feed it after a month? Not sure if this would apply if I just want to amend the bottom 3rd.
- If you suggest this. How long would you wait? Also, could you also comment on what you think about what to do when transplanting? Basically the same bullet points/questions I posed in question 2 above.
I just FIMmed them today. Plant A on the 6th node, Plant B on the 4th node. Both plant are the same age, but Plant B was affected more by the poor watering technique, amongst other things.....(spilled the pot over 3x, don't ask )
It is worth mentioning that Plant B is drying out faster than Plant A now, and I can feel the noticeable difference in the soil compaction. This is why I am sure it is a drainage issue on Plant A. I guess my whole thread is MOSTLY tailored for Plant A, but partially for Plant B. What I mean by this is, my small plant won't be transplanted yet as it is not bad with drainage.... but should I fertilize it?
All other questions on my thread definitely apply to the big plant.
If I confused you, please let me know... I'm sorry. I tried to proof read and make sure everything made sense from an outsiders perspective. Thank you all in advance!