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Is it ready to harvest

  • Thread starter Thread starter josh65
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Is it ready to harvest

josh65 311 Replies 16,374 Views
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I've got yellow light meter it says good but manufacturers says it's ok but I know you have to move light as it grows
 
Does the 200watt light have a dimmer?
Personally I would have it 36" at the seedling stage.
 
And does anyone know where to order some good bud been ripped off around hundred bucks cause of no good bullshit
 
36" away. Not too sure Happy Frog requires adding manure, that may create a really hot soil. Im not an organic soil expert tho
 
It would be hot unless you got a kickin microbe world going on and then I still wouldn't... look at the numbers on average pasteurized manure plus your fertilizer.
You're at 6-4-5 already, Idk what amount of manure but let's assume it's pretty reasonable 1/8th cup powdered commercial... that is almost 1.8+ across the board. 8-6-7 (close enough for government work). It will:
A- play hell in the microbe world inviting invaders
B- SALT BURN FUCKER!
C- drain your helper molecules like fuck so later... SALT BURN FUCKER!
[deity] save the little children.
 
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Hey I'm new to this light stuff what is the readying on this meter what's supposed to read I'm just trying to grow my own smoke and good smoke this is F1 hybrid milky way next I'm going to skunk and kush going to put them in ,3 gallon pots


 
I see one light measure in lux but I use ppfds. Convert it and look up proper ppfd numbers then adjust light spacing. 76 is a better ambient temp.
 

It's 14:days old lights 19 in please let me no if light needs to raze meter says good
 
Honestly man you need to learn some patience. It doesn't look much different than my weed old seedlings.
 
I have a method which is not explosive-based nor illegal in Scotland.
Improved Atomized Ballistic Injection.
You use air from a compressor to reduce liquid fertilizer to a super fine mist and then propel it into the plant's rootball at hypersonic speed.

Conceptual Flow Diagram – “Air‑Assisted Root Mist Device”​


1. Fertilizer Reservoir


  • Holds your nutrient solution
  • Optional “mixing paddle” for drama
  • Output: liquid to next stage

2. Liquid Conditioning / Pre-Mist Stage


  • Filters solids, ensures uniform droplet potential
  • Could include a “vortex chamber”

3. Pump / Feed Control


  • Regulates volume of liquid per puff
  • Could be described as “precision violence module”
  • Output: controlled pulse of liquid

4. Atomizer Chamber


  • Where liquid meets brief, intense airflow
  • Air input via a pneumatic pulse (short, strong)
  • Air breaks liquid into micro-droplets
  • Optional “diffuser grid” to spread the mist evenly
  • Output: fine aerosol

5. Subsurface Delivery Interface


  • Could be described as “awesome”
  • Directs the mist into the soil with force drilling
  • Porous media or mesh lets air escape while carrying droplets
  • Output: soil-embedded micro-mist

6. Settling / Equalization Zone


  • Optional: brief pause chamber to let turbulence calm
  • Output: total root-zone aeration + nutrient distribution
 
Aeroponics? LMFAO 🤣
I can easily explain that to your satisfaction if that is your only concern. 😊

Ok, so all will be clear.
Aero- for obviously Aeros, of course "love".
Ponic(a)- πόνος (pónos) = labor, effort, toil
-ponic originally referred not to water, but to the exertion involved in sustaining life through cultivation.
“Growth achieved through labor mediated by water.”

Obviously.
 
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I can easily explain that to your satisfaction if that is your only concern. 😊

Ok, so all will be clear.
Aero- for obviously Aeros, of course "love".
Ponic(a)- πόνος (pónos) = labor, effort, toil
-ponic originally referred not to water, but to the exertion involved in sustaining life through cultivation.
“Growth achieved through labor mediated by water.”

Obviously.
Aeros from the Greek for sky, air, atmosphere.

BTW, “Eros” is the god of love.
 
Aeros from the Greek for sky, air, atmosphere.

BTW, “Eros” is the god of love.
Yes and so you would then be "aeros" air loving your plants and incredible speeds at the droplet level. Every micron of soil surface available would be absolutely lovingly penetrated by plant feed.
 
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