ttystikk
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- Jan 4, 2011
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aha just stating facts ive read the posts u ant stupid,
thankyou a yes ive read loads obout scrog , and thankyou 4 your advice ive have attached sum pics im on week 3 n a bit from planting ( not germination) wat your option of light hieght ive topped them all and also, you know the side shoots off the plant should i top them just a thought nice 1 lew:cool0041:
Looking forward to your pics, brother!
ScrOG, or Screen o' Green, is an entirely compatible approach to taking maximum advantage of indoor lighting. The only reason I don't use it is because of the interval production approach I'm testing, which is to move plants from one environment optimized for their current needs to another as they grow, and I haven't figured out how to efficiently move the screen with the plant.
If the experiment doesn't work out, I'll happily do SCROG, cuz it's less work for the same results!
Nice thread. I employ all of these techniques and much much more. For several years now I've been working on developing this new technique similar to what you describe that I call monsterSCROG'ing.
Pictures say it all, but basically its a mobile, modular extremely large SCROG that is 2'x2' with the first "trellis" set at 9" above the soil, and the second "screen" or "trellis" set at 18" above the soil. Extreme topping and training is employed to the 4 splayed main branches. They flower under a 1000w HPS on a light mover in a 8" Blockbuster hood with a dedicated 440cfm fan. The flower room holds (6) 2'x2' monsterSCROG's in a 4'x6' environmentally controlled room.
Mine have about 40-100 colas that are from 4-12" tall with 9" as a median. I generally pull 4-12 ounces from each plant with about 5-6 zips on average. 4-6 month veg for each plant with extensive LST, and topping as you described here in this thread. You will note in the pic that each monsterSCROG is mobile and sits on a cart. It is also transplanted as a SCROG, you will notice that the 5 gallon pot is split in half. I start the SCROG in the top half of the bucket in veg, drop it on top of the lower half with flower mix and veg for 2-4 more weeks then flower it out.
This strain is Indiana Bubblegum (gixies) and there are about 75 tops. The main canopy never got thicker than 12" and I topped her about 6 times.
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Here are a few shots of how the bucket system works. The first "trellis" is just for LST and usually its just a few pieces of string to constrain the lower main branches to its splayed position. I vegetate plants in this little 2.5 gallon with the PVC frame for 2 months before adding the bottom 2.5 gallon of flower mix and veging another 2-4 weeks to fill the top screen or trellis (depending on the strain). For this stain I used a SCROG screen with 2.5 inch spacing or 64 spaces in a 2'x2' screen. For indicas I just use a trellis with 5" spacing in the trellis.
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ttystikk... I'll take a pic of just the pvc tiered trellis system so you can see how its all assembled together. It is indeed a wicked design that I've come up with. Please feel free to use and/or improve upon anything.
The monsterSCROG I made fits through my veg and flower room doorways (which are standard door sizes). I specifically designed the screen size for that reason.
The whole pvc trellis setup should fit easily around the outside of your RWDC bucket and serve as a perfect holder for the screen (or screens if you try the tiered trellis setup).
I built my system- at least as currently configured- so that I can move each stage of girls from one custom designed environment to another every 2 weeks, first through veg, and then through flower. I did it this way to maximize energy and space efficiency, and to ensure that lighting, temperature, humidity and the nutrient/additive package are all ideal for that specific 2 weeks in the plant's lifecycle.
As I mentioned before, my girls are all in 8" net bucket lids, with small holes drilled around the rim to accomodate the twine I use to tie down the plants. I use vine clips so the string doesn't damage stems and so they're easy to adjust. This way, when I need to move the plant I grab the netpot lid, and everything comes along as one easy to carry unit. This makes what otherwise would be a big job of moving plants trivially simple. Pick them up from one RDWC bucket and plunk them down in the next, done.
724530 8" MESH POT/ BUCKET LID:
The reason I'm interested in the trellis is because fiddling with the strings and vine clips is a tedious process and so if it can be streamlined, I have that much more free time! My only issue with adopting your design, Greenstone, is that the trellis as you've designed it would not travel well from one stage to the next. If I (we?) can figure out how to make it a structurally integrated part of the bucket lid, then I will do it ASAP!
One idea I had was to use a modified version of a 'spirit catcher' style weaving. What I have in mind is a circle of stiff wire or some such perhaps two feet in diameter, with enough weaving inside to form the screen for SCROGging the plants. I can even imagine one that could be adjustable, so as to grow with the plant's needs. However, I'm still struggling with how to structurally attach it to the bucket lid. I can't depend on the plant itself to hold things in place, as they grow in hydroton rocks in the netpot and so they don't stand up well by themselves.
If you use simple chicken wire and zip tie a cylinder of it to the net pot it will be very sturdy. You coudl tie down to that, and you could zip tie a cut square sheet of sturdy screen material (steel reinforcement for driveways maybe) when you move to the next step. Then you can add another layer at the next step,, except bigger... etc...
With my initial design I attached the trellis to the outside of the 5 gallon bucket by cutting notches in the pvc and putting a cotter pin through each leg to connect it to the bucket. I dont have any pix of that though.
I just wanted to post a few more pix of the system im still designing and testing. Im not trying to hyjack your thread, I just thought that you might benefit from a few of these pix.
Here is a pick of a transplant I did today. I just pull the plant from the 1 gallon pot and drop her right into the top half of the bucket system. It fits in absolutely perfectly, its just a simple filling in of the space around it with fresh veg mix and Im done. Note I also do my transplanting in huge plastic concrete mixing bins. God I love these things.
Oh, the strain is the new CannaVenture Purple Berry BX. She has been topped 3 times and she has been in veg for about 3 months now. She still has about 2 more months to go; one month in the 2.5 gal, then another 2-4 weeks in the 5 gallon (with the bottom half attached).
Tomorrow I will post a pic of her with the tiered trellis in place.
~Doc
on the idea I threw out there...
I would get those cheapie bamboo sticks/stakes or 1/2" pvc with holes drilled for the zip tie to pass through and reinforce the chicken wire with 4 stakes/sticks zip tied to the cylinder. Then, you could cut a nice hole in one section to access the base of the plant. This would totally work. Cheap. reusable. Only thing you would have to replace is the zip ties. You coudl tie all your leaders to the outside of the chix wire instead of the top of the net pot, and then when they get taller, top em with the screen, and move em out. Train them again, throw em in flower...
and boom goes the dynamite.:mad0233:
The wire I'm thinking about using is actually the stuff you get in rolls of fence material; the openings are big enough to stick your hand through, the wire is large enough diameter so as not to cut the stems, and it's plenty stiff enough to stand on its own without additional support.
I have already drilled 4 holes in the edges of each net bucket lid, so I'd use that as a working diameter for the vertical cylinder. Using twist ties, or zips, either one, would provide enough stability to hold it all together.
>>>reaching into the hat<<< watch for Mr. Rabbit
:icon_animal26:
twist ties are a little weak, but the coated garden wire will work perfect, and is REUSABLE.
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