H
hoobastank_enthusiast
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- Aug 20, 2023
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There's lots of reasons you could shock on transplant, root damage is one of them. But as you say you need to do a considerable amount of actual damage to the root ball as a whole.I truly think, that for new growers, that have beating their heads against the wall when they run into issues, that potting up is an easy target, a really simple thing to blame the struggle on, meanwhile it’s 50 other things that are really the problem. The myth needs to be crushed. The whole shocking an auto from transplant thing drives me crazy. Unless the grower separated the root ball with a cheese grater, that ain’t the issue.
Something I think is more common is the incorrect preparation of the target (larger pot's) media. If you have substantial differences in nutrient makeup/composition/pH/EC/WHATEVER, the plant is going to notice and you will be suffering through those problems because.. well that's its home now.
Another reason I like coco over soil is how much easier this is to solve. When I transplant in coco, the target media is buffered in exactly the same nutrient solution I'm feeding the source media; when the plant moves it has no fucking idea because as far as it can tell everything is exactly the same.
The best argument I think anyone can make for transplanting is to just show the results of doing it successfully. This is a day 15 Durban Poison from seed that was transplanted on day 10 from a 1/4 gallon nursery bag to the 1 gallon bag it's in now. Within the first 24 hours after transplant the plant added over 1/2" of vertical growth. It DNGAS. Does not give a shit.