I have seen air pockets when pulling small plants out of plastic pots that were not transplanted correctly, granted it was not our lovely cannabis bc i grow that in smartpots (i have a small vegetable plot with 14 different types of plants that i've grown for 3 years) but still just saying it is a risk...if you pull dry dirt off a dense root system during transplant it is possible to form a pocket where the soil was more loose and if very little soil is able to get through, especially coarse or chunky soil, pockets can form bc we are packing down, making it even harder for soil to settle perfectly in. I have seen dead roots, mold, etc in those pockets and i will throw away those transplants,granted they're vegetables and seeds are easy to come by in large quantitiesdry. its easier to remove and work with a plant with dry soil. when pulln the plant out break of ne excess dirt around root ball w.out damagn roots then place in new pot (already filled mostly with soil) then fill in with soil 1" above where soil was in last pot and gently press down soil in to firm position n then you water it well. you cant get "air pockets" in your soil if you have been and continue to water it lol. water will seep in all pores and settle soil fine. with wet all the weight of soil + moisture is pulling down on ur roots from the plant (not good) and your plant will be/has been drinkn so its full of water 2! ive seen it done both ways. i just prefer dry and believe its safer.
Yep! That's what I find to work for me too! Not too "crumbely dry" or too "heavy, soggy, wet". I don't think it reaaly makes a whole lot of difference; eveybody just does whatever feels right to them.in between