What is lst? Sorry maybe I'm not understanding haha nvm I got it so I train it to lay over lol
"LST" means "low stress training". That's bending the plants over and/or tying them down so that they don't get as tall, and to expose more of the insides to light for better growth and yield.
A cfl 23 w 120 volts it seems to like it so far
One 23W CFL bulb is perfectly fine for a small seedling, but its just not enough light to flower a big plant. Try it and you'll get a small stunted plant with little to no yield. Plan on upgrading. As a first rule of thumb, if you're going to use CFL lights, figure optimal lighting is about 75 watts of bulbs per square foot of plant canopy (ie base) area. Yes, these lights get hot, and you'll need adequate ventilation to keep temperatures in a range where the plant will grow well.
Awesome man thanks so good to know thought I was asking dumb questions lmao so no matter what I could feed it good nutrients and treat it as if it was some good stuff
As a bit of friendly advice, probably the single biggest mistake new growers make is to use too many nutrients! If you're using good new soil, you may not need to add ANY extra fertilizer AT ALL during the first grow. But to the extent you do, you'll want to use VERY LITTLE. Certainly not more than once per week, and probably not even at full strength either. Also, don't forget to completely STOP using fertilizers two weeks before your plants are done, using only pure water to help flush excess salts from the soil so they don't end up in your buds.
What I thought thanks man do you know if me growing regular stuff is gunna be alot different from growing indica and sativas ? And or kush or whatever people call them sorry I'm new
Indica/kush, and sativa/haze refer to different kinds of strains, depending on whether or not they have subcontinental (ie Indian/Afghani/Pakistani) or tropical genetics in them. Without making this too complicated most modern drug strains are hybrids that have both some indica and some sativa genetics in them. Indicas, kushes, sativas, hazes, and hybrids all come in both regular and feminized versions, depending on the breeder and line in question.