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Budtirement
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Maybe it's just the difference in strains?
Sorry to hear that. We do get the humidity in Va tho don't we.SW VA here. Just finished trashing an outdoor auto with mold/rot throughout. No preventative measures at all except for a fan to try combatting humidity. Maybe all the fan did was push humidity into the bud. Mostly I do indoor though.
Should be able to squeeze in an auto. Late September/ early October harvest probably.Hope all your grows are flourishing!
Is it too late to start an autoflower for an outside grow?
I'm in N. VA.
Still time for another crack at it. Maybe I'll try a different auto strain or two and hope for smaller bud structure. Got a few different strains from some random pollen chuckers in the fridge.Sorry to hear that. We do get the humidity in Va tho don't we.
I had spots on the buds last year. When I investigated there were little caterpillars so I did an emergency harvest and salvaged about 50% on that plant.
This year I've got Lost Coast Plant Therapy to try. It says it is very versatile and negates several insects and molds so I'm hoping I can defeat that kind of issue if it turns up this year.
My taller plant (I assume they are photos) are all in a similar phase, kind of neat watching them grow and now start to flower. Taller plants in this image:Daylight in Northern Virginia is down to 14 hours 10 minutes today and she's starting to respond.
Have you tried starting the clones without the dome? If the room is that humid you may not need it. Or perhaps a few small holes to get some ventilation., it's very humid here and I start every plant in my room which from a seed goes great but a clone before it roots wilts really bad and gets moldy. I cut the mold off and took them out of the humidity domes, put em in dirt and they grew like gold; how do i avoid the whole mold thing to begin with??
I'm no expert but have done a few clones. Only done in rock wool once. Probably my doing but they got a green algae although they rooted. They then went into my first dwc attempt which ended in failure due to root issues. I've used a diy bubble cloner with success but no noticeable advantage over any other process (time wise). I've stabbed cuttings directly into potting mix with success. I now have settled into using root riot cubes (sort of a degradeable sponge material). In all cases I've used humidity domes. Rooting tends to always take about 2 weeks. The only exception was a monster clone that took over 3 weeks. I use rooting hormones (I've heard some use pure honey and swearby it). I do the 45 stem cut and trim about 1/2 the surface area of the leaves. I soak cubes in a clonex seedling food (some growers use mild nutrient solutions) ph'ed to low 6's, squeeze out 1/2 or so of the solution, put in a suitable sized starter cell, mist foliage with clonex solution daily and under 24 hrs of low light. They can't really process much light with no roots. I place the starter cells in shot glasses for added stability with some solution in the bottom. I think a heat mat helps on low temp. I think high humidity is helpful. Occasionally the cube needs a few spritzes as it dries. No matter what I've tried, it's usually a 2 week ordeal before multiple roots are exiting the cube.There are tons of variations on the process. This works for me 100% so far.Ayeee my VA community!!! I've been looking for y'all lol. So I'ma start right off the bat here. I live on the boarder of Virginia and North Carolina in cana. I've been around growing since a child but this is my first grow on my own actually doing the work. I got three royal gorilla mothers that are out right now starting to flower, recently I was learning about the pH levels and got mixed up thinking alkalinity was to little of a pH level an acidic was high so I went and got espoma lime ph up anf gave it to them and their ph went THREW THE ROOF!! And they're extremely droopy at the moment. my pH up and down bottles just came in today and I now know the difference between alkalinity and acidic now lol but how much ph down per gallon of water should i use in a serious situation like this??!! Further questions I have, it's very humid here and I start every plant in my room which from a seed goes great but a clone before it roots wilts really bad and gets moldy. I cut the mold off and took them out of the humidity domes, put em in dirt and they grew like gold; how do i avoid the whole mold thing to begin with?? It also worries me for when Im gonna have to dry my plants. I read a bunch of tips such as charts that explained in certain humidity percentages the ways to differently trim them and for the humidity percentages here it said to fully trim the buds and stems off and dry them individually on their net since leafs an stems carry moisture. Which I planned on doing. But is there any tips that have worked for any of y'all personally??! My hvac is set to 72°f got my windows closed an vents open. at the moment I have a plant in veg about two months old that's a clone under a grow flourecent doing great, then I have a tray of clones in the humidity dome under blue and red full spectrum grow lights cause I heard it was a better color mix for them but they keep getting moldy!! and no roots are coming out of the rockwool yet when vegetable seeds i started a week after them already have roots. Advice?????
The green algae is because the drainage. If they don't drain right the green starts out here. It happened to me when I didn't take the bottom off my flower pots. But I just got pH solution so I'll be able to soak em with a little rooting hormone and use the dome for bout three days then take it off slowly. Usually what happens is I cut the mold off take em and put em in dirt and they'll grow so I feel like it's the humidity in the dome or something.I'm no expert but have done a few clones. Only done in rock wool once. Probably my doing but they got a green algae although they rooted. They then went into my first dwc attempt which ended in failure due to root issues. I've used a diy bubble cloner with success but no noticeable advantage over any other process (time wise). I've stabbed cuttings directly into potting mix with success. I now have settled into using root riot cubes (sort of a degradeable sponge material). In all cases I've used humidity domes. Rooting tends to always take about 2 weeks. The only exception was a monster clone that took over 3 weeks. I use rooting hormones (I've heard some use pure honey and swearby it). I do the 45 stem cut and trim about 1/2 the surface area of the leaves. I soak cubes in a clonex seedling food (some growers use mild nutrient solutions) ph'ed to low 6's, squeeze out 1/2 or so of the solution, put in a suitable sized starter cell, mist foliage with clonex solution daily and under 24 hrs of low light. They can't really process much light with no roots. I place the starter cells in shot glasses for added stability with some solution in the bottom. I think a heat mat helps on low temp. I think high humidity is helpful. Occasionally the cube needs a few spritzes as it dries. No matter what I've tried, it's usually a 2 week ordeal before multiple roots are exiting the cube.There are tons of variations on the process. This works for me 100% so far.
Cannabis doesn't like wet feet but these don't technically have feet yet so be very mindful of excess water! Or youre just rotting out that stem.
Medium just moist enough to support the clone from drying out.... then if you use the dome....just spray the sides of the dome. Make sure after the first day just go ahead and open the vents and start introducing a light airflow to them. If it's too much, adjust vents and so on....Try not to let water collect at the bottom, and stuff like that.
Oh and... sanitize everything. Be extra with it. Cut clone at an angle and scrape it a little bit, if you use rooting hormone it goes on then, and then the rest is history pretty much.
You'll be alright !!! keep at it.will do thank you!!
Cannabis doesn't like wet feet but these don't technically have feet yet so be very mindful of excess water! Or youre just rotting out that stem.
I thought a lot about this before I put mine in the ground cause the dirt around here is nothing but clay so even little rain sits in there. I made a little drainage system out of PVC from the bottom of their holes out the side of the decline they were on and it's surprisingly worked great!I started a separate thread about this, but since I am sure a lot of us in this thread are in the same boat (hopefully, not literally) are any of you planning to cover your outdoor plants with the expected rainfall from tropical storm Debby? I have an auto that is I think getting closer to harvest time and do not want it to get so wet it rots, my 5 photos are in early stages of flowering, so maybe OK.
They are planted on a slight grade, so should not end up in any standing water, but the concern is real.
I was thinking of maybe using some cheap PVC sheet (paint drop cloth type of thing) that is clear for sunlight, but should be protection against the worst of the rain. I'd still need to watch them as I could see it going from dumping rain to crazy humid, especially under a plastic sheet, in the blink of an eye.
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