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Thanks Bode! Happy smokin' tooHighya Carmen,
Nice green color, and happy looking girls! What more can you ask for at this stage?!? Happy Smokin'
Aha, this makes so much sense. Let's see what time does. This plant seems more sensitive than its sister plant too, I think that is a factor.Hey Carmen,
The Gals are looking very well trained.
Heres a nitrogen tip for organics.
Nitrogen, sooner or later, and usually around the 30 day mark, releases from its bindings and you quite often experience "The Claw".
Nitrogen requires water to work, so excess nitrogen requires excess water. Its how proteins are processed, and proteins are pure nitrogen, its what greens compost down into, so if you see the claw, dry them out a fair bit for 7-10 days and you should see them lighten a bit, and new growth wont be clawed.
It happens in new soil because calcium and magnesium are struggling with each other to find the perfect ratios. Calcium moves better in the soil so after 5 or 6 waterings it fully mixes with magnesium and releases magnesiums grip on the soil.
Prior to magnesium becoming balanced, its locked to nitrogen on a 1 to 1 ratio for every molecule of magnesium that hasn't yet interfaced with calcium.
So in real life, about a month in you give them their 1st real deep full saturating waterings as the roots are now formed, and Bam! that nitrogen gets released all at once.
If you look at most of my past grows you will see a line of lower fans in almost every picture, that are clawed.
I look at it as a sign of success. When I see it I know its time to dry the soil a bit and start cranking up photosynthesis. It means your soil is ready.
You will likely see a good growth spurt now, it usually follows the claw if you dial the H2O back a bit on that pot for a week or so.
Thank you Otter!Looking fine here Carm! Nice color to them!
Thanks Shed. Here's the thing. I'm not sure if you recall the buds from the last RR XXL I grew. They were very thick and way too close together. I thought that it was because of the quad. That's why I don't want to do anymore cutting on these two. Opening the branches up into a canopy is another matter. I just want them not to grow one mass of bud again. That was the plant that got a bit of bud rot and fungus if you remember? So I felt opening the branches outwards might help get some light and air in there.Flat as a pancake! I was wondering if leaving the flowering one au naturel rather than flattening it would give you a chance to see the difference in cola length in the end. I think you mentioned something earlier about when to stop training them.
I have found that to be the case with autos too. I think timing is of the essence and that is where I am still feeling my way.I'm wondering too. Hoping you get another beastly beauty like the one I saw. Those were some thick buds.
I know with photos you can sometimes (sometimes) delay flowering outdoors by topping or pruning heavily. Only by a week or so and again , not always. The weed gods have to align the weather and lighting properly.
heheheNot sure I would do that to an auto though. Unless you absolutely hate having long fat buds.
I didn't get the cricket. Was it a T20 or ODI? I love cricket but there's a pecking order for our DSTV and as the more devoted sports followers, the men are front of queue for streams. I managed to find the rugby world cup on the radio which was excellent.I mean, I don't but, I'm just saying.
Did you catch the cricket yesterday. What a game.
Have a good one
Enjoy setting up your grow spaces this week