Ninjadogma
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| Water temp | Max dissolved O₂ |
|---|---|
| 68°F (20°C) | ~9 mg/L |
| 77°F (25°C) | ~8.3 mg/L |
| 86°F (30°C) | ~7.5 mg/L |
I read once that a plant will detect the electrical charge in the air just before a storm and 'open up' to be ready for the water which is coming. I think it was an article about electroculture...sticking copper wire in the soil and all that palava.Micro Pulse Watering
This tip isn't for everyone, but it's exactly what the doctor ordered for the coco and peat blend I use.
Strategy: Do a light mist of only about 3-4 ounces of water over the top of the pot to prevent soil hydrophobia and channeling, keep roots exploring and branching around the upper zone and keep microbes at the top vibrant.
Frequency: In between full drybacks; remoisten just the top layer as it dries
Why it works: Plants read the soil and react to what's going on. The micro pulse watering sends a weather signal to the plant that it has rained, and triggers the roots to respond by exploring. It lends to a more even soil moisture and especially with peat blends, prevents the top layer from becoming hydrophobic.
*If you have fungus gnat issues, this isn't the tip for you.
This is all great stuffRH Pulsing in your Clone Environment
Traditional advice says to start clones under high humidity and gradually taper down to a lower, stable RH that supports root initiation. But sometimes clones stall even when the environment seems perfect. When that happens, a gentle humidity‑pulsing strategy can restart the rooting process.
Action: Introduce a daily humidity fluctuation that gently dips RH into the 60–62% range, then allows it to return to 70–75%.
Why It Works: Mild RH swings mimic natural day–night rhythms. When RH dips slightly, the temporary increase in VPD encourages the cutting to pull water from the stem rather than relying solely on leaf‑surface moisture. This subtle “pull” helps drive auxin downward and supports root initiation.
Plants respond strongly to predictable environmental rhythms. By creating a consistent, gentle oscillation, you give the cutting a pattern it can “lean into,” helping it transition from passive hydration to actively drawing water — the physiological shift required for rooting to begin.
Very interesting and makes sense to me.That's what the instructions say with the clone covers with vents. Open them up a little longer each day.
I surmise that the lower humidity for longer periods encourages new root growth without depleting fluids too much.
Oh, my random observation. Septoria and Alternia (leaf spot) outdoors, will calm down when the temperature drops. Keep the plants alive and as disease free near the buds as you can and wait 'till October to harvest.
(southeast michigan)
While it's probably something that most already know about, one suggestion AI had for me was to get an IR thermometer and calculate the Leaf VPD instead of the air VPD when dialing in the tent environment. Once I started doing that, I did notice an improvement in her health (although she was quite healthy to begin with). Seems the deeper we dig, the more we find out.
Cheers,
BA.
I just watched a video by Dr. Bugbee and he mentioned this very thing.While it's probably something that most already know about, one suggestion AI had for me was to get an IR thermometer and calculate the Leaf VPD instead of the air VPD when dialing in the tent environment. Once I started doing that, I did notice an improvement in her health (although she was quite healthy to begin with). Seems the deeper we dig, the more we find out.
Cheers,
BA.
I was quite surprised how much of a difference there is between air and leaf VPD considering it's generally only a couple of degrees F difference. It's those tiny details that all add up.I just watched a video by Dr. Bugbee and he mentioned this very thing.
Actually, I need help freeing the 'soil' from the roots. I planted in 20 gallon pots. I cut them out last fall and today, the lumps look just the same. Thought the winter would wear them down at least a little.Additional notes: If you need help with how much perlite/biochar to add or any questions about the supporting additives, DM me or feel free to ask in this thread.
Actually, I need help freeing the 'soil' from the roots. I planted in 20 gallon pots. I cut them out last fall and today, the lumps look just the same. Thought the winter would wear them down at least a little.
Thanks, I'm still not sure, think I'll look around for someone to rototill the garden. The only problem there is that the roots are gonna wrap up in the tines. hmmm. Maybe I'll just haul them to the back.A 20 gallon is too big for the technique, but with pots up to 7 gallon what I do is let it dry/shrink a little so the bag can slip off. I take the whole mass and start tapping at it over the wheellbarrel so the dirt falls from the connected roots. I keep tapping and shaking and then throw the root mass away. It leaves very little remaining to pick through.
Since you've got that much dirt and the ball wasn't removed in a manner I described, you can make yourself a screen out of 1/4" galvanized mesh and just sift your dirt through it. It will catch most of the roots but you'll also have any larger chunks of perlite get screened out too.
But you know really, if you break the roots up in the dirt and leave them, it might even be better. They lend additional fibrous structure to the soil and as they break down they release nutrients. So unless you had some soil pathogens - and if you did you don't want to reuse any of the dirt anyway - it might be better to just leave them.
Once freed from the container, I hold mine by the root nub inside a garbage bag and just keep spanking the root ball until the medium falls away and I'm left holding bare roots. You have to keep turning it around as you do it but it eventually all falls off. It has to be on the dry-ish side but not brittle so the roots don't break up too much. There's always going to be some that make it through however.Actually, I need help freeing the 'soil' from the roots. I planted in 20 gallon pots. I cut them out last fall and today, the lumps look just the same. Thought the winter would wear them down at least a little.
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