Supergroomer - Back & Smaller Than Ever

i had a stray in my white cookies lol. not sure how either. had 7 seeds, planted 4, have 3 left and have 5 plants. not missing any other seeds. :hmmm:
i transplanted her/it and it's doing fine. extremely slow but good. is it possible for a seed to produce twins? or a plant to produce a sucker? never heard of either in all my years, but i mostly work with clones. seeds are sort of a rare treat for me. i find they are definitely far more touchy than clones.

it's hard to tell, but almost looks like toxicity rather than deficiency. what kind of soil is that SG? i recently ran into a bale of SS4 that i would swear has a way higher nute content than normal. it's caused me all sorts of initial problems. pretty sure it's the soil too.. everything from the older bale is doing fine. figures LOL. i was just bragging about their product the other day too.
 
It does look like a seed rather than a shoot from the other plant. Is there any chance of a seed having been in the soil or maybe you dropped two accidentally?

I agree with Cajun, let it grow a bit before transplanting. So cute. LOL
I can't really see the leaves close enough on the problem plant, it's bushy for sure. :) I don't think I would transplant to a smaller pot, if it were the other way around with the pot too small that would be a problem.
 
Yeah, I would never go smaller. Problems of this sort are usually helped by upcanning. Smaller root space is not a good choice.
 
i had a stray in my white cookies lol. not sure how either. had 7 seeds, planted 4, have 3 left and have 5 plants. not missing any other seeds. :hmmm:
i transplanted her/it and it's doing fine. extremely slow but good. is it possible for a seed to produce twins? or a plant to produce a sucker? never heard of either in all my years, but i mostly work with clones. seeds are sort of a rare treat for me. i find they are definitely far more touchy than clones.

it's hard to tell, but almost looks like toxicity rather than deficiency. what kind of soil is that SG? i recently ran into a bale of SS4 that i would swear has a way higher nute content than normal. it's caused me all sorts of initial problems. pretty sure it's the soil too.. everything from the older bale is doing fine. figures LOL. i was just bragging about their product the other day too.

They are in a mixture of FFOF, Promix BX and Perlite. They were transplanted a week ago Friday. They got a light feeding of FF Grow and Cal/Mag on Sunday and plain water on Wednesday. :peace:
 
Truth be told, she had the weakest root structure of the three plants at transplant. The BB (that I pictured) was the best. Not sure if that is relevant. :peace:

i haven't gone to the cheat sheet yet, but that leads me to believe toxicity. maybe zinc.. i could be dead wrong lol. i'm bebopin around here right now. your double italian mocha had kick :laughtwo: yerba tea is steeping now.. look out supply run here i come!
 
Definitely keep the little bitty thing and transplant it when it's a bit bigger! That's just super cool - I love mystery pot. It's like a total gift.


Truth be told, she had the weakest root structure of the three plants at transplant. The BB (that I pictured) was the best. Not sure if that is relevant. :peace:

Your other plant - the only thing I know about plants in soil is this, as their roots do, so do their leaves. If it's an issue in lower leaves, then it's an issue with lower roots - they're probably stretching to find the water table after you transplanted them. But I am genuinely clueless with soil plants - all I know about them I've learned from reading Emilya's posts.
 
My only concern about leaving the little one where she/it is, is the BB was the one that exploded with roots. If that little one gets caught up in the BB root ball, I ma not sure how I would separate it. :peace:

I don't think that will be a problem for a little while. Roots are probably growing down, not across. If you left it too long, that would certainly happen in the lower area for sure.

Thoughts anyone?
 
Why separate them? Transplant as a unit into a bigger pot and keep them as companions. It won't limit anything. B A R's proven that, in a 2 ltr bottle nonetheless.
 
Except if the little one turns out to be a dude. Then there is a problem. ;) :peace:



In which case you cut it at the soil line and leave the roots to decompose and feed the soil.
 
Here are the pictures in natural light Cajun.

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That bad leaf is just touching the soil, is all. Remove it and you have a picture perfect plant! We hope...:Namaste:
 
Originally posted by SantaClause.

Im sorry to report: Rudolph got into a batch of SweetSues brownies and i havent seen him since!
I Cannot fly my sleigh without, and so ive had to begin spreading joy a bit earlier this year. Hope you enjoy the gifts!! :xmas:Merry Christmas! Ho Ho Ho! Merrry Christmas:xmas:

Ps. If you see a lost, stoned reindeer..give him a bowl of milk and send him home please.

Pps. Id transplant the gift asap before its gobbled by the BB.;):xmas:
 
I don't think that will be a problem for a little while. Roots are probably growing down, not across. If you left it too long, that would certainly happen in the lower area for sure.

Thoughts anyone?

I'd move it with a spoon after the third or fourth set of true leaves. Pot it up in a 1 gallon and water it in well. Good to go.
 
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