sea of green help

:leaf: i need a little help . i wanna start a sog set up and i want my plants a max of 2 or 3 feet tall at harvest , what size pots would you reccomend ? i want the biggest fattest buds possible ... its gonna be soil grown .. can someone that has some good info help ? thanks very much.
 

cacamal

Well-Known Member
probably get a lot of debate on pot size but most would use 3gals maybe even rose pots if you only want 2 footers...if you got the space and the material I would probably make beds for a massive sog
 

alotaball

Well-Known Member
a gallon a foot is the general rule... I would go to 3 gallons regardless though.. you can fit alot of those.. you can just run grow bags.. they are like 50 cents each.. put your clones in at a foot .. and you will be happy.. good luck on the grow!
 

alotaball

Well-Known Member
your lighting will determine yield.. but with most strains .. if you put them in at 12 inches or less... in 3 gallon pots... you will see their full potential... I have pulled 3-5 zips on 12 inch untrained clones. That is not with a mass yielder.. So im sure you can do as well if not better with a big yielding strain.
 

jojodancer10

Well-Known Member
yeah its all about the lights. stick with square pots something like 7x7xx7 along those lines. thebigger the plant the bigger the buds. drop your clones and let them veg until they get 12inches or so then prune and throw them in flowering.
 

panhead

Well-Known Member
The accepted theory of one gallon per foot or one gallon for every month of life is bullshit,its been proven wrong many times in these forums,ive proven it wrong myself many times.

There is a thread on this site titled ITS ALL BULLSHIT where we discussed this,several members including myself & fdd2blk show what can be done is very small pots where people think rootbound is an issue.

When i still grew soil i grew kinda like what your talking about,i grew multiple cola plants from topping with no side branching,i grew 3 to 4 ft plants pulling between an ounce on single cola plants to around 2 ounces per multiple cola plants.

My pot size was just over 2 quarts & i made my own soil,excellent results can be had using extremely small pots,the small pot size turned out to be a blessing,you have to water most everyday & when in heavy bud 2 to 3 times a day,i ended up using a drip feed watering system for mine,it also means you feed alot more.

Using the 2 quart pots was a faster method over running large pots,the small root mass constantly feeding & drinking via drip system brought soil growing close to the speed of hydro.

The bud in my avatar was grown in a 2 quart pot,its hard to tell but that bud was as fat as a 2 litre coke bottle & longer than the bottle,members nicknamed that plant ( the moose ) & made the avatar using a pic of the bud.

You do not need big pots to pull 2 ounces,it can be done using 2 quart pots along with a vigorus watering & feeding schedule or a drip system,big pots are not needed,if your friend got tiny bids it was more likely his methods or plant genetics vs pot size.

Look up that thread its all bullshit & see routbound plants in tiny pots giving large yeilds.
 

alotaball

Well-Known Member
Pan Head I completely agree with the root bound crap.. you can grow large plants VERY well in small pots ... IF like you said .. you constantly water and feed... as long as you keep giving them what they need.. then they will keep growing.. but...

Most people ... with not much experience wont be able to maintain a garden in small pots.. unless they do a drip system like you suggested. S

So i guess I agree completely but want the OP to know that if he goes that small.. HE NEEDS to have a drip system or no day job because they will pull that pot size dry in a matter of hours during mid to late flower.... Also you need to know what your doing with your feed schedule.. because it will be very easy for the plants to become deficient.
 

panhead

Well-Known Member
Pan Head I completely agree with the root bound crap.. you can grow large plants VERY well in small pots ... IF like you said .. you constantly water and feed... as long as you keep giving them what they need.. then they will keep growing.. but...

Most people ... with not much experience wont be able to maintain a garden in small pots.. unless they do a drip system like you suggested. S

So i guess I agree completely but want the OP to know that if he goes that small.. HE NEEDS to have a drip system or no day job because they will pull that pot size dry in a matter of hours during mid to late flower.... Also you need to know what your doing with your feed schedule.. because it will be very easy for the plants to become deficient.
Im glad you made this post,i agree 100% & it was an oversight on my part not including a cautionary statement such as yours,thanks for catching it.

Just so everybody knows if you plan on going small its exactly as alotaball said,you need to have enough experience to be able to read the plants in order to administer proper npk ratios & in what ppm's,running ultra small pots is much like hydroponics with the feeding technique.

Watering is also extremely important,plants can go from good health to falling over in a day from just forgetting them one day,once underwatered its hard to get them caught back up on water.

Drip systems are cheap as dirt & install in an hour,unless you have unlimited time to water its advisable.
 

alotaball

Well-Known Member
or if you want a real answer...

Most household circuits are 15 amps.. a 1000 watter pulls 9.5 give or take.. so that about 24-27 amps for your setup.. good luck just "plugging them in "
 
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