ganga gurl420
Well-Known Member
Spotted them pretty quickly so I think I'll get a hold of them before it's much of a problem. Just sucks I was bug free for last six months or so other than a temporary gnat problem.
Spotted them pretty quickly so I think I'll get a hold of them before it's much of a problem. Just sucks I was bug free for last six months or so other than a temporary gnat problem.
Wow you got some good sized bushes going on there !
That will do the trick lolCalled in reinforcementsView attachment 4131766
We all had those buggers all winter. Free biological control.Called in reinforcementsView attachment 4131766
These are my oldest starts ever and your not the first to tell me I jumped the gun. I do have two of my six that are more like 8 week transplants. So we are going to get a good visual side by side on the difference in growth.Awesome thread i have a similar no till thread going this year. I hope you can have the clones transferred with no stress/problems. I have found from personal experience small clones under 6" put out june 1st perform much better than older bigger plants. No science in my opinion
These are my oldest starts ever and your not the first to tell me I jumped the gun. I do have two of my six that are more like 8 week transplants. So we are going to get a good visual side by side on the difference in growth.
If you can start to early this will be the year I learn that lol.
They are about four weeks older than any of my previous outdoor transplants.
What indoor light schedule do you run with your starts? Could your problem with older plants come from going backwards on the light schedule?
These have been at 15/ 9
We had what looked like Lady Bugs all winter as well, stinking little fckrs. Turns out they're actually Japaneese Lady Beetles . Different bug that was introduced as a bio control for ( i think ) aphids.We all had those buggers all winter. Free biological control.
They looked after some thrips for me.We had what looked like Lady Bugs all winter as well, stinking little fckrs. Turns out they're actually Japaneese Lady Beetles . Different bug that was introduced as a bio control for ( i think ) aphids.
3 of the 18 plants I have are trying to early flower. But they are just now reaching sexual maturity. The trigger point for flower varies by strain, but also by different plant of the same strain. If you can put a light on them for 2 hours at midnight they will go back into veg.I got the fence in today. In other words..... it's on.
It seems I very possibly started them a couple weeks to early. I was warned and believed I had it under control but said earlier in this thread, if you can start to early this would be the year I find out. Live, grow and and learn.
It's looking like I'm going to run two of the bigger plants but the other two have started to flower. I think I let their nute supply run to low in the 10 gallon smart pots. They slowed a bit and I didn't think much of it because they were already huge. Then they started to look worrisome last week maybe 10 days ago but kept my fingers crossed. Now two are just to hairy and full on bud sites on most branches. Two of them are holding in veg fine. While I think it was the low nutrient supply that truly sent them over the edge their size tells me I could have shaved four weeks off and still had some tree starts.
Undecided if I should just stick them under a light inside or see if I can get then going again and strip the bottoms.
I knew I'd learn something this year and I'm sure this won't be the last lesson.
On the bright side past experience taught me to have back ups. They are about a foot tall.
So line up is..
3 Orange Skunk from seed back up
1 Space Queen clone back up
1 Mammoth from original bunch, lol large to transplant
1 Death Valley Kush. Same as above.
Pics tomorrow when I get to planting.
3 of the 18 plants I have are trying to early flower. But they are just now reaching sexual maturity. The trigger point for flower varies by strain, but also by different plant of the same strain. If you can put a light on them for 2 hours at midnight they will go back into veg.
It is the length of the dark period, not the light, that determines the flower trigger. Longer nights makes them flower, so when you break the night up into two shorter nights, it fools them into thinking it is summertime. Known as the Gas Lantern Routine. Folks in the tropics have been doing it forever.If I do the lights on in mid dark cycle can I count on them staying in veg? Is this something you have done before to save early flowering girls?
Sure would like a cure. Stress herms are another concern going back and forth on light cycle when I sit here considering it.
Thanks.