Stunted seedlings?

TheCannaisseur

New Member
I just started this plant about 2 weeks ago. Growth seemed normal at first, but now it’s been 4-5 days and the plant hasn’t really grown at all (or very little). Not sure if it’s something I’m doing. The only thing I can really think of is possibly overwatering. Not sure if my seedling is indicating anything I’m missing. the soil has been staying moist for longer than I would prefer. So I’ve cut back on the water (I can attach other pics if needed). Not sure what’s really going on. Any help is greatly appreciated!!!0EF9CDFD-3B42-43B4-BFB5-8B43F8A6291B.jpeg
 

TrimothyLeary

Well-Known Member
Seconded, especially on the watering. And don't cut back on the AMOUNT of water, cut back on the FREQUENCY of watering.

I'd personally give it a week until next watering. Water to runoff and leave it for another week.
 

TheCannaisseur

New Member
Right now, It’s just under a generic 50 watt clip light. I didn’t want to put them under 600 watt just yet. As for height it’s hanging about 12 inches above.
 

Romulanman

Well-Known Member
I use a spray bottle to water my seedlings until they get a few nodes. Its a lot harder to overwater that way. They don't need much. Let them search for the water.
 

TrimothyLeary

Well-Known Member
Also, assuming you get this handled, what's your next step? That looks like a very small, and fairly permanent container, and you're definitely going to want to pot up.
 

Doug Dawson

Well-Known Member
I use a spray bottle to water my seedlings until they get a few nodes. Its a lot harder to overwater that way. They don't need much. Let them search for the water.
That works, I use coco plugs so I water them daily. Thankfully with my coco/perlite mix I cannot over water.
 

TheCannaisseur

New Member
Also, assuming you get this handled, what's your next step? That looks like a very small, and fairly permanent container, and you're definitely going to want to pot up.
I was going to wait a couple weeks, then transplant into 3 gallon, then finally into 5 gallon smart pot. Or maybe go directly into 5 gallon. I’m not exactly sure yet. I’ve never grown in the smart pots so I’m curious to see how they work out.
 

Doug Dawson

Well-Known Member
Ok bud, I was afraid of that. This light is actually only 100 watts. They don't list in on your link but do on the Canadian site. Specs say
600W Double Switch Plant LED Grow Light
Specifications:
  • Dimensions: 15.7*6.7*2.3" inch
  • Weight : 4.3 lbs
  • Actual Power: 100 watt ±3%
  • Input: AC100-240V, 50-60Hz
  • Core Coverage: 1.5*1.5-2*2 ft
  • Lifespan: ≥ 50,000hours
  • Material: UV protection and fire-proof PC Cover + metal frame
What these shady companies do is take the max value for each led, add them up and call it a 600 watt light. It is a total lie, their power supply only pulls 100 watts so can only output a max of 100 watts. With only 1 plant it will get you by but it is not a very powerful light. Make sure you keep both the veg and bloom switches on all the time so you can make use of the full 100 watts. If growing is something you are planning to do more of, especially if you will do more than 1 plant at a time, you will want to start looking for a better light. Sorry, I know nobody wants to hear that. I too started with a 1200 watt listed light that was only 150 watts in actuality. It grew weed and I still use it sometimes for seedlings but that's about it.
 

Crazy_Ace420

Well-Known Member
Get the Mars Hydro Ts1000w. Its only 150w but she does the trick. Cheap too on Amazon, who knows maybe real cheap on Ebay too.
 

TheCannaisseur

New Member
This is good to hear. I’m hoping to eventually be able to expand with more plants, but for now just sticking to the one. How exactly do you calculate the true number of watts. No point in wasting money on something that isn’t going to help in the long run.
 
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