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Is this fade normal in mid-late flower?

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Is this fade normal in mid-late flower?

donie67 99 Replies 12,871 Views
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Lol imagine putting 150 plants in one room that I can outyield with a few monsters. Work smarter, not harder. But then again being a trans father means low IQ. Reeeeeeee
You get back what you put out in this world. Just got back from the hospital with my wife, she had a stent put it, so I’m more worried about that. The most I’m going to say here is that you are abrasive. Taking a shot at my child, pretty low. Either way, you have a nice day.
 
Watch your step kids, Nazis abound.
 

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You get back what you put out in this world. Just got back from the hospital with my wife, she had a stent put it, so I’m more worried about that. The most I’m going to say here is that you are abrasive. Taking a shot at my child, pretty low. Either way, you have a nice day.
Probably got the vaccine lol
 
Its all good, I’d grow circles around that little tike. It’s folks who talk that way, who really can’t ever back it up. I have an archive of many successful grows, done a million different ways. People like that, need better role models.
 
Its all good, I’d grow circles around that little tike. It’s folks who talk that way, who really can’t ever back it up. I have an archive of many successful grows, done a million different ways. People like that, need better role models.

Those that handle shit, rarely talk.

Those that talk, rarely handle shit.

We all know who's who round here.
 
Lol imagine putting 150 plants in one room that I can outyield with a few monsters. Work smarter, not harder. But then again being a trans father means low IQ. Reeeeeeee
.........what?
 
At fifty, they are amazing. Any gummie really.
There's something about the Trolli berry ones. Not too sweet (although it is sugary candy), sour, but not comically, juicy and flavorful to the max.......whoever made these is a genius. No other sour gummies come close.

One thing though, you gotta get the larger, thicker bags with the ziplock. The smaller bags don't hold the moiature in very well, unless you get them very fresh. You can tell when they dry out a little. They have to be gooey moist.
 
You get back what you put out in this world. Just got back from the hospital with my wife, she had a stent put it, so I’m more worried about that. The most I’m going to say here is that you are abrasive. Taking a shot at my child, pretty low. Either way, you have a nice day.
Perhaps 3chan would be more his speed......

If there's a choice here, it's a damn easy one. I hope she's ok. Take care of that, it's far more important than dealing with those who's names check out....
 
@GNick55 I don't know who originally posted that graph but it is a GAME CHANGER! On a personal level it was the best bit of info I have picked up from any site. Thanks THC Farmer! So simple, but usually the secret sauce recipe is like that.

Seriously guys take a screen shot then compare NPK's of what you are using to the NPK needs on the graph.

Should be like a light coming on in a dark room!!!
The Aptus "nutrients needs" graph? I'm not fully knocking it because it doesn't really tell a full story but it seems kind of boiler plate? It also stops at 9 weeks? What about after that?

Like many things like this, it's usually more complex than that, a combination.......why do most trees' leaves turn colors in fall? It's not because we make it happen (yes, cannabis is not a tree). But they do change colors because winter is coming........but it's because they're going to lose their leaves, this year's set of leaves has used up their usefulness. The soil isn't depleted of nitrogen, otherwise where do next years' leaves get theirs from? They do lose chlorophyl, but not because the sun can't give it to them, there's something more natural, seasonal, genetically coded going on. Everything is process, stages......some plants finish up and shed leaves, hibernate, or outright die, not when winter freeze comes but way before that. Others hang on and on until winter literally does kill them.

There's this area indoors where nature blends with nurture. The natural cycle of cannabis, outdoors, tends to have a stage where leaves age, lose their usefulness (even the flowers will age and lose their usefulness, go past their prime, overripen, and prepare to die).......

Indoors, we can nurture, and tweak ñnature, fool nature.......but only for so long. We can keep feeding, sunning, extend life, keep leaves green.....is that "natural"? We can have a plant that we started indoors in early spring, that's fully mature, ripe, ready to harvest, but still with productive, green leaves......right around New Years, or after. During a raging snow storm. Is that "natural" or "normal"?

Yes. If it's an 18 week flowering Thai. Send it to me for complete analysis. ;)
 
Its all good, I’d grow circles around that little tike. It’s folks who talk that way, who really can’t ever back it up. I have an archive of many successful grows, done a million different ways. People like that, need better role models.
Growing becomes secondary.

Character. That's what matters. ;)
 
The Aptus "nutrients needs" graph? I'm not fully knocking it because it doesn't really tell a full story but it seems kind of boiler plate? It also stops at 9 weeks? What about after that?

Like many things like this, it's usually more complex than that, a combination.......why do most trees' leaves turn colors in fall? It's not because we make it happen (yes, cannabis is not a tree). But they do change colors because winter is coming........but it's because they're going to lose their leaves, this year's set of leaves has used up their usefulness. The soil isn't depleted of nitrogen, otherwise where do next years' leaves get theirs from? They do lose chlorophyl, but not because the sun can't give it to them, there's something more natural, seasonal, genetically coded going on. Everything is process, stages......some plants finish up and shed leaves, hibernate, or outright die, not when winter freeze comes but way before that. Others hang on and on until winter literally does kill them.

There's this area indoors where nature blends with nurture. The natural cycle of cannabis, outdoors, tends to have a stage where leaves age, lose their usefulness (even the flowers will age and lose their usefulness, go past their prime, overripen, and prepare to die).......

Indoors, we can nurture, and tweak ñnature, fool nature.......but only for so long. We can keep feeding, sunning, extend life, keep leaves green.....is that "natural"? We can have a plant that we started indoors in early spring, that's fully mature, ripe, ready to harvest, but still with productive, green leaves......right around New Years, or after. During a raging snow storm. Is that "natural" or "normal"?

Yes. If it's an 18 week flowering Thai. Send it to me for complete analysis. ;)

Hey Mr. Supporter guy. Look what you guys have done to the OP's thread.
He is growing autos and that "graph" and learning what the plant needs
for 120 day start to finish plant is not only relevant, but will be a GAME CHANGER for him.
Absolute GAME CHANGER!!
It answers his question as well as 3/4 of the questions on this site.

Not a lot of people growing a 18 week Thai on here.
Though the same principals of the graph apply whether its 9 or 18 or 24 week plant. Just a flatter curve with nutrient strength being the variable.

Why you trolling bruv? Why would you trash talk something that will help 75% of the people asking questions on this site to have great grows start to finish?
Can you not see the post titles in the forum, "help with my autos" or "new grower need help".
Why would you give all that good information after trashing something that will be so beneficial to so many on this site with your "longer than 9 week" hypothetical situation? You selling seeds? How are your sales for strains going longer than 10 weeks?

Bruv can not even see how that graph will help the great majority of people on this site.
Never mind. Your "why" doesn't matter to me.
 
There's something about the Trolli berry ones. Not too sweet (although it is sugary candy), sour, but not comically, juicy and flavorful to the max.......whoever made these is a genius. No other sour gummies come close.

One thing though, you gotta get the larger, thicker bags with the ziplock. The smaller bags don't hold the moiature in very well, unless you get them very fresh. You can tell when they dry out a little. They have to be gooey moist.
You have that worked out, cured gummies bad 😂
 
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