Bud Stankalot
Active Member
WTF??? I highly doubt they died because of them being rootbound. My plants are rootbound all to hell and they look great. It was probably the out of control pH. Just to let you know, Fox Farms is massively overrated.
That's a good attitude. Go with bigger holes and better soil next year, you'll pull a lb per.Yea definetly not root bound at all! I'm now thinking PH problems and bad using of nutes ect ect....o well I still have 4 plants that I'm hoping to get a QP off of each so good learning experience for next year
Isn´t it in the ground ???ROOT BOUND. what kind of pots you using? how many gallons?
Even if a plant is rootbound, that doesn't mean it's going to shrivel up and die.rootbound...
yeah you could read a book.yep so they are fucked....look like shit and are dead when i went up there today .....i flushed with 4 gals of 6.5 ph water not that they will even have a chance of coming back but i did it for the hell of it but i lost one like this about 7 weeks ago what did i do wrong so this wont happen in the future?View attachment 1129995View attachment 1129996
actually i was underwatering for awhile but i dug it up and it wasn't root bound nor did it have root rot so it was bad balance of PH and bad use of nutes....i beleive i owe spanishfly an apology. it wasnt root bound.
I'd have to disagree. We were in the 90's for over a month and my plants didn't slow down much. Also, there was a couple days that were 110+ I had to water twice in the same day, but they looked great the whole time.Might have been a little heat stress as well. Were the plants in direct sun all day or were they in partial shade? Almost all plant growth stops at temperatures beyond 85 degrees.
I lost two myself in July when Sacramento got our 105 degree plus spell. Classic mistake!