Is there a general rule of thumb when deciding when it’s time to transplant your crop during veg?
my plants currently went from a half gallon pot to a 1 gallon pot and have been vegging there for 4.5 weeks. My big concern is they’re still taking 3-4 days to dry out which to me means the root ball isn’t developed enough to transplant...... but at the same time I feel they should be ready after almost 5 weeks of vegging. Any advice?
If so, vegging in a 1 gallon pot for 4.5 weeks, it should be quite root bound.
Flip it over, slip off the pot and take a look. If it's not root bound, something is wrong with the way you're growing. I can't say what that might be, with this limited information.
If so, vegging in a 1 gallon pot for 4.5 weeks, it should be quite root bound.
Flip it over, slip off the pot and take a look. If it's not root bound, something is wrong with the way you're growing. I can't say what that might be, with this limited information.
It’s my first time growing in coco, I’m still trying to get a good watering schedule going (I bought a soil moisture meter today) in order to try and crack down on it more. Could stress from training stunt my root growth? Or is it more likely the overwatering
I have no experience with coco, so hopefully someone else will wander in. But you'll need to post pictures of your plants for anyone to be able to help further.
It’s my first time growing in coco, I’m still trying to get a good watering schedule going (I bought a soil moisture meter today) in order to try and crack down on it more. Could stress from training stunt my root growth? Or is it more likely the overwatering
I have no experience with coco, so hopefully someone else will wander in. But you'll need to post pictures of your plants for anyone to be able to help further.
I treat my coco different... you can read here OP and there is a lot of good info in the thread of different experiences and why. But imo coco should never dry back unless your doing for crop steering purposes.
Ok writing this cause i see this issue often and rather have a thread to link than explain this each time. This is not my work but a collection of info from many members here and I have put into practice myself. So first off COCO is NOT soil. For best results we want to keep it saturated...
I treat my coco different... you can read here OP and there is a lot of good info in the thread of different experiences and why. But imo coco should never dry back unless your doing for crop steering purposes.
Ok writing this cause i see this issue often and rather have a thread to link than explain this each time. This is not my work but a collection of info from many members here and I have put into practice myself. So first off COCO is NOT soil. For best results we want to keep it saturated...