Vert Convert

jrainman

Active Member
So big thanks to all you vert guys for answering questions and posting your grows. So far I am happy with the way things are going in my first crude attempt at going Vertical.

So now that I am converted ,big changes will be made in my small room.

So the first 3 weeks were horizontal in this first attempt ,but Liking what I see ,If I had to guess at this point I would say close to 300% , but we shall see what the scale says soon enough,003.jpg014.jpg
 

hazeman1911

Well-Known Member
So big thanks to all you vert guys for answering questions and posting your grows. So far I am happy with the way things are going in my first crude attempt at going Vertical.

So now that I am converted ,big changes will be made in my small room.

So the first 3 weeks were horizontal in this first attempt ,but Liking what I see ,If I had to guess at this point I would say close to 300% , but we shall see what the scale says soon enough,View attachment 3019078View attachment 3019079
looking good just popd in whats the strain making the switch to vert myself
 

jrainman

Active Member
Thanks ,the stain is THC Bomb , short bushy loads of golf ball size buds , more of a head high strain , one more round of these, going to set up a screen forthis last round.and see how they do . then its on to some new strains.going trellis style .
 

tystikk

Member
Sounds good so far, one thing I would get right on is a perpetual grow system where you have at least two stages of veg before the plants get to the vertical trellis. It works a lot better that way, at least for me.
 

jrainman

Active Member
Sounds good so far, one thing I would get right on is a perpetual grow system where you have at least two stages of veg before the plants get to the vertical trellis. It works a lot better that way, at least for me.
Please explain two stages of vertical growth.
 

tystikk

Member
Please explain two stages of vertical growth.
Okay, so due to legal stem count limits in Colorado, I grow fewer, larger trees as opposed to many smaller shrubs. In practice, this means that my plants need to grow pretty big before I put them in my trellis. I do a one plant per trellis style grow, each trellis is 4' x 6.25' so each plant has to cover a full 25 ft²!

In my perpetual system, fresh cuttings are taken 8-10 weeks before the bloom room is ready for them; 2 weeks to root, two for growing out of a four inch square pot, and the rest in RDWC getting some 3' tall and broad enough to cover at least 2/3 of the trellis panel when it goes in.

That's how I get just four plants to fill in a 100 ft² vertical silo, without waiting for two months to flip them into bloom. Since this is a vertical growth forum, yes, perpetual growing becomes a basic and all but essential technique for getting big enough plants to take full advantage of a vertical garden.

The other option, of course, is to simply grow more plants and have several layers or racks. This cuts down on lead times but can be risky from a plant count perspective.

The op I've built is a very carefully crafted lab that reconstructs a commercial indoor growhouse in miniature for developing and testing industry specific and optimized designs, techniques and equipment.

To this end, I've eschewed the 'blast and bail' tactics of SOG or massive numbers in favor of a process that takes advantage of the stable nature of a legal indoor facility by allowing for a continuous ('perpetual' in our jargon) production line of plants from clones to harvest.

Larger scale facilities do this for too many other good reasons to list here, but since space is money indoors, the ability of continuous production lines to cram large outputs into small footprints cannot be ignored. This is simply because building spaces for individual stages of plants as they grow from slips to bloom ready saves space while providing for ideal growing conditions- both of which improve productivity.

Since I'm investigating vertical growing for its advantages in space saving techniques as a direct driver of cost reduction, it only makes sense to extend that approach beyond just the bloom room. Vertical trellis saves space, perpetual/staged/continuous production techniques do the same for time.

That should teach you to ask me a simple question, lol!

20140207_105645.jpg
 

jrainman

Active Member
So thanks for explaining this theory and how to achieve this style to its max potential . and I have to say ,I understand and agree , although this is nothing new (this
approach ) ,but I would never have thought literally to use this approach, but makes 100% sense to me as I am a big fan of the man who invented this form of production
thanks Tystikk and Henry Ford .
 

tystikk

Member
Lol yeah, pretty much pumpin' out model OG Bud, you can have it any way you like, as long as you like DANK. LOL
 
Top