PopAndSonGrows
Well-Known Member
All of my seed grown plants have had noticeably thicker main stems than my clones.
we get 70-90% humidity over the year. 265 rainy days a year.Ya pm is always an issue here
Yeah Im all seed grown here. I haven't any experience with clones so I can't say.All of my seed grown plants have had noticeably thicker main stems than my clones.
I had several plants get well over 10 feet that year and very wide. I was not prepared. I thought since they were indica crosses they wouldn't get that big. This one I started tying down in August. I never top outdoor plants.impressive!
Did you use any topping etc?
Ive been growing outdoors for years, but never really done much apart from plant them, then harvest them a few months later. I want to do some learning so I can grow monster trees like I see some folks doing on here.
I had way to many indoor plants my first grow and gave some away to a friend that put them outdoor and they got huge like that. He was also a way more experienced grower so I can’t say what his method was after that. I do know if you veg through winter you can make beautiful monster!probably started inside to veg for a long period before transplanting outside for the remainder of veg growth and to transition to flower.
Veg long. My biggest trunk as of yet. Look at the root in bottom right corner View attachment 5062053
Not sure im generous enough to share my beer with emYou can always get fatter stems by bending, twisting & pruning. On young veg plants I give them "Indian Burns". I twist the crap out of them. They get limp for a bit afterward. By days end they are usually back to an upright position.
Beyond that, growing outside & in ground will ALWAYS produce fatter stemmed plants. I like starting indoors and then transferring outside when the weather breaks in the spring. Get some massive girls that way.
Beer, manure, other fermented waters is all my uncle would use and he'd grow beasts. Like that dudes grow above with the budweiser can next to it. Which is super funny since I mentioned feeding beer to plants.
Dude, earth is abundant in silica. If you're growing in the ground they'll get all the silica they can use.Maybe silica is lacking in compost? Again relative noob but was expecting more answers of N than silica
it doesn't, who said that?i honestly didn’t know it increased the plants ability to uptake more of everything else like someone stated.