1diesel1
Staff
Supporter
- 11,212
- 438
Ya, I have to push it back, transplanting I don't think is fees able. There in 20 gallon pots. When I transplanted from 5s to 20s I put the guano directly under the rootball. I'm thinking just flush till they snap back. Go to flower when there looking better and go in blind to flower play with my regular nutes and try not to overdoo it. Shit that's what I did when I started growing.The only thing I can think of is transplant em. I don't think flushing would work with that. Flushing doesn't work will for globally applied dry ferts well from my experience. Can you push back the flowering start date?
Good luck boss, I hate when those things happen.
Slap
What about a flushing agent that can break down the guano?Knowledge is power. Research everything you do with your ladies. BG is notorious for being very hot.
A transplant will help to some degree along with a good flush Just my .2 cents I wish you well and a speedy recovery. All is not lost.
Basically I need to pull em out and loose the bottom half of me roots?No, it has to be broken down by microbes and that will still leave you with N+ for a while.
the problem with putting large amounts of nutes right under your root zone, especially something as HOT as guano can be you get a "tea cup" effect, which is an old gardening term What it means is with heavy concentrations directly under the rootzone the roots wont stretch and reach out beyond the nutrient source. With guano the zone will stay HOT. Not sure if you mentioned size but if it were me and they are worthy genetics I would gently loosen the plants from the existing pot. I'm hoping that the original rootball will still be intact from its shape from the original pot. Then you can transplant into a fresh soil source minus a bunch of guano and then water them in well with Ph adjusted water per your local water source. Within a week they should rebound.Basically I need to pull em out and loose the bottom half of me roots?
She is right. Your soil food web/microherd will have to mineralize it and that takes time.No, it has to be broken down by microbes and that will still leave you with N+ for a while.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?