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Cpurola's Outdoor grow in Southeast Michigan 2025

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Cpurola's Outdoor grow in Southeast Michigan 2025

cpurola 1,290 Replies 91,752 Views
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Heya C I had that happen to one of my best plants back about six years ago. I went Ape shit I cut the top off just below the hole then rammed a bass guitar string into the hole until I felt a pop sound then I wrapped a decoy cord around the stem about an inch below the hole I cut as tight as I could get it then dripped wax from a candle to seal the hole like a cap and let it branch it survived just fine
Wow! It really recovered!
I'm gonna let it go for a few days. My biggest colas always have worms in them and I thought about just topping all of them to avoid the disappointment.
The top seems to be recovering a bit so I'm leaving it. That's not the only hole in TOGYK's plants. 🙁
 
Love the flower accents. Are they a helper species?
Oh ya, I forgot, I did have a few volunteer dill plants and then I threw some seeds in there too.

Speaking of volunteer plants. My little one is still little. LOL

20250710 191517
 
2 days.
I have to water these 20 gallon pots every 2 days! It just rained yesterday.
Took a walk back there after dinner and they were all wilted!
If I do this again, I'm getting bigger pots. @Oldchucky, 35 gallons are yours, right?
 
2 days.
I have to water these 20 gallon pots every 2 days! It just rained yesterday.
Took a walk back there after dinner and they were all wilted!
If I do this again, I'm getting bigger pots. @Oldchucky, 35 gallons are yours, right?
Yeah, but a lot depends on how much per light you put in! At this moment, I am watering Mine probably every day and a half! But I use a lot of perlite. And since I raise them up off the ground, they are drying back quick! And that’s just what I wanna see! The plants are loving it! But it is a little more work water wise. And when the plants get bigger, they contribute very significantly to drying those pots out! I’ve gotten to that point! Maybe you have also! In my opinion where I am at good fast solid dry back is gold! I depend on dry back to keep my roots cool! On 105° days like today! And tomorrow and the day after and the day after! Lol! Just make sure you don’t overwater them! That’s hard to do when the plants get big! Hang in there, sister!😍
 
Yeah, but a lot depends on how much per light you put in! At this moment, I am watering Mine probably every day and a half! But I use a lot of perlite. And since I raise them up off the ground, they are drying back quick! And that’s just what I wanna see! The plants are loving it! But it is a little more work water wise. And when the plants get bigger, they contribute very significantly to drying those pots out! I’ve gotten to that point! Maybe you have also! In my opinion where I am at good fast solid dry back is gold! I depend on dry back to keep my roots cool! On 105° days like today! And tomorrow and the day after and the day after! Lol! Just make sure you don’t overwater them! That’s hard to do when the plants get big! Hang in there, sister!😍
Yeah, one thing worth trying for these hot pot conditions is vermiculite instead of perlite. Vermiculite is supposed to hold water a bit, whereas perlite sheds it. Both are used primarily to keep the soil from compacting. But yeah, maybe it won't make an appreciable difference, but I'm using it on patio pots that get awful hot and watering like once every three days.
 
"

ChatGPT said:​

In indoor planting, perlite and vermiculite serve different but sometimes overlapping purposes. Here’s a clear breakdown of their uses, differences, and when to choose one over the other:

🔹 Perlite

What it is:
White, lightweight volcanic glass that’s been superheated to expand into porous granules.
Primary Use Cases:
  • Aeration: Keeps soil loose and oxygen-rich.
  • Drainage: Improves drainage, helps prevent root rot in overwatered plants.
  • Rooting Cuttings: Useful when mixed with peat or coco coir for propagating plants.
Ideal For:
  • Succulents, cacti, cannabis, and plants that hate “wet feet”
  • Hydroponic mixes (often part of a soilless medium)
  • High-performance potting mixes where airflow is critical
Downside:
Dries out quickly, doesn't hold much water—better for drier-loving plants.

🔹 Vermiculite

What it is:
Mica-like mineral that's also heat-expanded into spongey flakes.
Primary Use Cases:
  • Water Retention: Holds water and nutrients well.
  • Seed Starting: Helps keep seeds moist without drowning them.
  • Soil Lightening: Loosens heavy soil but still retains moisture.
Ideal For:
  • Seed germination
  • Moisture-loving houseplants (e.g., ferns, peace lilies)
  • Mixing into peat-based media to make it more absorbent
Downside:
Can hold too much water for some plants, leading to soggy soil.

🔁 Perlite vs Vermiculite – At a Glance

FeaturePerliteVermiculite
Water HoldingLowHigh
DrainageExcellentModerate
AerationHighModerate
Best ForCacti, succulents, cannabisSeedlings, moisture-loving plants
WeightLighterHeavier
pHSlightly alkaline (~7–7.5)Neutral to slightly alkaline (~7)


🧠 Rule of Thumb​

  • Use more perlite if your mix needs to dry out faster or breathe more.
  • Use more vermiculite if your mix needs to stay moist longer or hold nutrients for seedlings."






    So this is accurate but AI saves me typing it. Nice tables too, thanks AI!
 
"

ChatGPT said:​

In indoor planting, perlite and vermiculite serve different but sometimes overlapping purposes. Here’s a clear breakdown of their uses, differences, and when to choose one over the other:

🔹 Perlite

What it is:
White, lightweight volcanic glass that’s been superheated to expand into porous granules.
Primary Use Cases:
  • Aeration: Keeps soil loose and oxygen-rich.
  • Drainage: Improves drainage, helps prevent root rot in overwatered plants.
  • Rooting Cuttings: Useful when mixed with peat or coco coir for propagating plants.
Ideal For:
  • Succulents, cacti, cannabis, and plants that hate “wet feet”
  • Hydroponic mixes (often part of a soilless medium)
  • High-performance potting mixes where airflow is critical
Downside:
Dries out quickly, doesn't hold much water—better for drier-loving plants.

🔹 Vermiculite

What it is:
Mica-like mineral that's also heat-expanded into spongey flakes.
Primary Use Cases:
  • Water Retention: Holds water and nutrients well.
  • Seed Starting: Helps keep seeds moist without drowning them.
  • Soil Lightening: Loosens heavy soil but still retains moisture.
Ideal For:
  • Seed germination
  • Moisture-loving houseplants (e.g., ferns, peace lilies)
  • Mixing into peat-based media to make it more absorbent
Downside:
Can hold too much water for some plants, leading to soggy soil.

🔁 Perlite vs Vermiculite – At a Glance

FeaturePerliteVermiculite
Water HoldingLowHigh
DrainageExcellentModerate
AerationHighModerate
Best ForCacti, succulents, cannabisSeedlings, moisture-loving plants
WeightLighterHeavier
pHSlightly alkaline (~7–7.5)Neutral to slightly alkaline (~7)


🧠 Rule of Thumb​

  • Use more perlite if your mix needs to dry out faster or breathe more.
  • Use more vermiculite if your mix needs to stay moist longer or hold nutrients for seedlings."






    So this is accurate but AI saves me typing it. Nice tables too, thanks AI!
Thanks so much, this makes sense. Guess I got spoiled with the low grade Miracle Gro in the blue bag. But their product has gone down hill big time and I wanted a better soil for cannabis.
I do go out and check on them every day so it's not really a huge problem, unless I need to leave for a couple days.
 
Thanks so much, this makes sense. Guess I got spoiled with the low grade Miracle Gro in the blue bag. But their product has gone down hill big time and I wanted a better soil for cannabis.
I do go out and check on them every day so it's not really a huge problem, unless I need to leave for a couple days.
Small vermiculite water resevoir layer in the soil build? As a pure strata? That could work.
 
Yeah, but a lot depends on how much per light you put in! At this moment, I am watering Mine probably every day and a half! But I use a lot of perlite. And since I raise them up off the ground, they are drying back quick! And that’s just what I wanna see! The plants are loving it! But it is a little more work water wise. And when the plants get bigger, they contribute very significantly to drying those pots out! I’ve gotten to that point! Maybe you have also! In my opinion where I am at good fast solid dry back is gold! I depend on dry back to keep my roots cool! On 105° days like today! And tomorrow and the day after and the day after! Lol! Just make sure you don’t overwater them! That’s hard to do when the plants get big! Hang in there, sister!😍
Think about watering 4 x's a day or more? Even with 4 gallons pots of coco they dry out every 2 hrs in the heat BUT what you said about the dry back and oxygen to the roots all apply here just on a much shorter time frame😉

The growth this produces, from seedling to flowering is amazing🥰
 
2 days.
I have to water these 20 gallon pots every 2 days! It just rained yesterday.
Took a walk back there after dinner and they were all wilted!
If I do this again, I'm getting bigger pots. @Oldchucky, 35 gallons are yours, right?
You have to at least get an inch of rain to water your pots for a day I've been doing this for years
 
First set of storms went through inch and a quarter of rain all is well here I had the top put on the enclosure

Don't want to miss my feeding tomorrow way more important than the rain at least to me
 
Here's my version of training. Outdoors.
You indoor growers can critique it and maybe give me a hint or two.
I put the net horizontally between the fence posts. It's green so hard to see.

View attachment 2470047View attachment 2470048
Don't think there's a wrong or right way. I just added a top to one I have caged in garden fencing. . Mine wasn't necessarily made for training, more than it was for supporting the limbs, when they go int flower. We get some nasty weather down here in my parts of Ohio. U know what I mean.
 

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Don't think there's a wrong or right way. I just added a top to one I have caged in garden fencing. . Mine wasn't necessarily made for training, more than it was for supporting the limbs, when they go int flower. We get some nasty weather down here in my parts of Ohio. U know what I mean.
I do know what you mean by those high winds/weather. That cage looks like it will stand up to it.
 
We got rain too. But when I checked the bags, it was dry near the bottom.
I check it with something like this, from Amazon.
View attachment 2474071
I had bad luck with this one but the one with a pH setting was much more accurate. However only for moisture as the pH function was inaccurate and the light sensor thing was fictional.
 
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