The Proper Way To Water A Potted Plant

I have another question you probably will be able to answer because you know how cannabis roots behave so well: Does cannabis do well in wide and shallow pots? I have a wide and shallow, bowl type terracotta pot that is about 8 inches deep and 19 inches wide.
Cannabis will adapt and grow well in whatever container you give it, but for this deep rooting plant, taller is better than shorter and wider. Since this plant has two sets of roots, the very specialized upper spreader roots that classify it as a weed and the deep seeking feeder roots, it helps to have some vertical height in the planter so these two root systems can spread out a bit.
 
Cannabis will adapt and grow well in whatever container you give it, but for this deep rooting plant, taller is better than shorter and wider. Since this plant has two sets of roots, the very specialized upper spreader roots that classify it as a weed and the deep seeking feeder roots, it helps to have some vertical height in the planter so these two root systems can spread out a bit.
Thanks!
 
Hi @almostfreegrower and welcome to the forum! :welcome:
I don't let the plants go more than 3 or 4 days without getting something, even if it just a little bit of water. While waiting for the plant to drain a container, you can water just the top spreader root system in the first several inches of the container by giving a much smaller amount of water, typically about 1/3 of what it would take to produce runoff in that container. Typically I will apply these small drabs of water around the outside edges of the container primarily, so as to entice the roots to grow out horizontally toward this water.

This small in between watering will be quickly absorbed into the plant and if done correctly, and none of it should fall into the bottom of the container where there is still a pool of water that you are waiting to be drained. This will keep the plant metabolism high and will even allow you to bring in additional nutes with these mini waterings. Usually after 2 or these little waterings, the plant will have been able to finally drain the container and you will be able to fully water on the 3rd one. Usually the roots will be growing so rapidly at this point, that you will never see such a long dry out time again and each time you get through a wet/dry cycle, it will happen in less time than the time before.

Just to kind of clarify what's been going on with my current plants and to see if what I did was correct: I was recently given a Funky Charms clone in a Solo cup from a friend at the end of June. I watered and fed the clone in the Solo cup until it was using up the water in 2 days or less . On July 5th I transplanted it into a one gal nursery pot and watered and fed it to run off. I have not watered it since then, (9 days), because the pot continued to feel heavy and the clone was not drooping whatsoever. Sticking my finger in, the top 3 inches of soil was dry. Per your advice, I lightly watered the top last night with a garden sprayer since there is still obviously water at the bottom. I tried to spray enough to go down a couple of inches. Is that the right way to do it?

I have another plant in a 2 gallon pot. I last watered it to runoff on July 4th and it hasn't been watered since. The pot still has weight to it and plant is not drooping. The first 3 inches of soil is bone dry but it obviously has water at the bottom. Last night I sprayed the top to try to wet the first 2 inches of soil. Am I doing this right?

BTW, I have very well draining soil. It is a combination of Sunshine Mix 4 and Dr Earth Pot Of Gold with extra perlite. It's on it's 3rd run.
 
Just to kind of clarify what's been going on with my current plants and to see if what I did was correct: I was recently given a Funky Charms clone in a Solo cup from a friend at the end of June. I watered and fed the clone in the Solo cup until it was using up the water in 2 days or less . On July 5th I transplanted it into a one gal nursery pot and watered and fed it to run off. I have not watered it since then, (9 days), because the pot continued to feel heavy and the clone was not drooping whatsoever. Sticking my finger in, the top 3 inches of soil was dry. Per your advice, I lightly watered the top last night with a garden sprayer since there is still obviously water at the bottom. I tried to spray enough to go down a couple of inches. Is that the right way to do it?

I have another plant in a 2 gallon pot. I last watered it to runoff on July 4th and it hasn't been watered since. The pot still has weight to it and plant is not drooping. The first 3 inches of soil is bone dry but it obviously has water at the bottom. Last night I sprayed the top to try to wet the first 2 inches of soil. Am I doing this right?

BTW, I have very well draining soil. It is a combination of Sunshine Mix 4 and Dr Earth Pot Of Gold with extra perlite. It's on it's 3rd run.
It sounds like you are doing things just right!
 
The Proper Way to Water a Potted Plant
Also covered: the importance of pH and why we successively up-pot


How to Water
Over the last several years I have put a lot of study into this, and I feel that I can now define the proper way to water a potted plant. Keep in mind that this discussion applies to at least 3 gallon containers and bigger. Please realize that this special plant of ours does not grow like anything else you have ever tried to grow, and no matter how good you are at growing peas, beans and tomatoes, you will have to change your methods to grow a weed.


The first rule of watering is to always water slowly, using no more than a quart at a time, pausing often to let the soil suck air in behind the water as it pools on the top. For me, that involves a routine of watering each of my plants with 1 quart, then taking a nice relaxing drink of whatever beverage I have brought with me to the tent. Then I take a deep breath, making sure to exhale deeply onto this plant, letting her know that I love her. After this, I take a nice big hit off of the pipe that also followed me into the tent, and then after a nice pause and maybe another drink, I go back to plant #1 and repeat the cycle. For 2 rounds, I water the entire surface of the soil, watching it pool up and get sucked down.


After this initial wetting of the top, my watering method changes a bit. Now, I want to do whatever I can to make the outside edges of the container, the wettest areas. Still only using a quart at a time, I now carefully water only there, all around the plant, only on the edges. While doing this, I slow down a bit so that the water doesn't pool as much in the center, always concentrating on the edges. The center will end up getting some too, and that's fine, but the wettest areas of the pot will be on the outside edges and you will be driving nutrient rich soil into the dense original root ball. Continue this, again going slow, maybe with a deep breath in the middle of it, and then continue all around, taking drinks, deep breaths and hits in between each round. Continue until you see the first signs of runoff, and then stop.


Look carefully at the surface of your container now. You will clearly see where the root ball is from your last transplant, because it will now be sticking up just a little bit above the original outer rim. Very fine soil has been driven through the original root ball with the flow of water and soil from the outer edges. This micro fine soil is very rich with nutrients because of its mobility. When you water from the outside edges, you force this micro fine sludge into the dense root ball, where it can do the most good. Once you establish this flow pattern in the container, you can be assured of totally replacing the micro soil in the center of the root ball with new soil, every time you water. Watering in the normal way does not create his circular flow, and root growth cannot be nearly as aggressive.
soil_with_arrow_640_1_.png

Lastly, take one last quart of water, and water very very slowly, just in the raised area where the original root ball is. As you do so, watch what happens at the outer edge of the original root ball.

You will see the very finest soil, almost a mud, migrating out of the old root ball, and into the middle! This completes the process of soil exchange in the container. In this manner, all the roots get to take advantage of the nutrients in the soil, and the roots follow the migration of the nutrient rich soil, toward the outer edges, creating lateral growth. I strive to actively drive the soil out of the middle, making room for the roots to grow more dense and bigger there, and as they do, the lateral growth also has to increase. Using this method, I have seen a steady increase in the amount of water needed to get to run off throughout the grow and by the end, plants watered in this way use approximately 30% more water than is seen using standard watering techniques. Watering in the manner I have described allows for a constant circular flow of soil throughout the container and will create an extremely dense root ball.
proper_potted_plant_number_2.jpg



Now it is time for a truism. It is best to water the roots, not the plant. A healthy and robust root system means a happy and productive plant. Neglect the roots and your plants can die, and certainly will be less than they could have been.

When do we water?
By far, one of the most common plant problems that I see with new gardeners is a lack of understanding as to when to water. New people get it set in their mind that watering every day or every other day is best, or that somehow, mysteriously, they know in their own human minds exactly how much water the plants need. These well-meaning new gardeners will determine that they will give exactly one quart or some other random amount, each time, no more... and no less, and really believe that they are doing a good thing for their plants, making these decisions for them.
Just as bad as these over-thinkers are the tomato gardeners, the "stick your finger in the ground" crowd, who proclaim: it's time to water when it is dry below the second knuckle. What they fail to realize is that when the top 2 inches is dry, the lower half of the container could still be saturated with water. Both of these common mistakes in watering methods are quick ways to drown your plants. These methods are not correct for growing weeds, and using them can actually kill your plants.


Marijuana is a weed, and the main thing that this scientific term refers to, is a class of plant that thrives in adversity. In order to grow it well, you need to understand that this incredibly robust plant works differently than other, less hardy plants. It is an extremely aggressive grower if you allow it to be, and to grow prize winning pot, you need to use its abilities to send out new roots to your advantage.


Watering incorrectly is the most common mistake that new weed farmers make. This plant needs a clear wet/dry cycle in order to thrive. If you keep it moist, you will kill it. The roots will aggressively chase your water, whatever you give them. If you just give a small amount every couple of days, that water will drop right to the bottom of the container. Your roots will follow, and will cluster on the bottom, instead of growing laterally throughout the container, and since they continually sit in the nutrient rich water, the plant sees little need to grow additional roots. How you water makes a huge difference in the formation of the root ball, and how this development happens is up to you.


There are many ways to tell when it is time to water, and if you wait long enough the girls will actually tell you that they are thirsty. They do two things when they see that they need water, they throw out a smell, and they begin to wilt, starting at the bottom, moving up. You can also use the lift method to tell when the container is dry, and almost always you will "feel" a dry container, before the above mentioned wilt and fragrance pump happens. Rusty Trichome taught me an important lesson; every time I think that I need to do something to my plants, I wait a bit... and I try to move at the speed that my plants are moving. "Patience, above all else." --Rusty


If you have a moisture meter you can also use it to find where the wet/dry (water table) line is in your container, and you can watch that wet/dry line move down over time. I used to graph my water table level by day, so that I could project ahead when the wet dry line would reach the last inch of container. Your wet/dry line will never go lower than that last inch or so, because once you get down in there, you are in all the big tap roots and mass at the bottom, and it tends to stay wet there longer because of capillary effect. Again, if you wait for the first sign of wilt and that perfume pump that happens at "water me" point, it will usually be just a bit longer than your measurements would indicate. Once the water table line is anywhere in that bottom inch is ok to water. You have dried out 95% of the water by that time and the roots have been chasing it as the wet/dry line progresses both downward and outward. The suction caused by the diaphragm that is the water table, will have pulled oxygen down deep into the container, and filled any voids. The roots will be happy.


Why do we up-pot?
The art of successive up-potting is important in growing a healthy root system. People like to be lazy. I am constantly seeing new gardeners take a little sprig of a weed and put it in a big 3 or 5 gallon container, thinking that they have done a good thing, and are now done with it... it's on to harvest time! The problem is, this doesn't work, because it gives you zero control over developing the roots, and without crazy watering techniques, almost no chance of a solid root ball forming. It is imperative to successively up pot your plants through stages so that the root system can roughly take on the same size and shape as the plant in order to get the maximum productivity. The roots grow aggressively in these weeds, and if you confine them to a container the size of the plant, they will fill that space in a short time with a dense root system. Putting a plant in an oversized container can and often does, result in all the roots going to the bottom, drowning the plant, root rot and overall poor health because of a lack of a root ball, and certainly less than optimum harvests. It is important to force these weeds into producing a root ball at various stages, to give the plant the ability later on to take in the massive amounts of nutrients needed to produce lots of quality buds.
The plants in the smaller containers can also more directly show you when they are thriving or more importantly when they are not. A strong healthy plant will eventually outgrow its container and an observant gardener is carefully watching the length of time between wet/dry cycles, and directly relating shorter cycles with more robust roots. A smaller container also gives the gardener the ability to see when the moment arrives that the amount of soil the plant is in is no longer large enough for the plant's abilities to be happy in it, because it will be obvious when the plant can drain the water that soil is able to hold, in less than 24 hours. Your soil and your container at that point have ceased at that point to be a good enough buffer, and it is time to double the space the roots have to work with. Let your plant show you when that time is, and try not to make decisions for her.


Why is pH important?
Some people claim that pH is not important, and if you are a pure organic gardener, never applying chlorinated water or salt based synthetic nutrients at your plants, pH indeed is not important. For the 99.9% rest of the world, a very important lesson for the new gardener to learn is the importance of pH. There is a scientific reason why a proper pH allows the plants to use synthetic nutrients, and why being outside of the proper range can cause deficiencies. If you want to grow pot using chemicals, you need to invest in a method to test the pH of any water going into the plant, whether it is plain water or water mixed with nutrients, and whether it is applied to the roots or sprayed on the leaves. If you neglect the pH, you can easily create deficiencies in your plants, and if left unchecked, you can even kill them. If you spend a lot of money on nutrients, it makes sense that you would want to also create the proper environment so that the plant can use these nutrients, but with a pH way out of the 6.3-6.8 range in soil, a lot of those expensive nutrients will just sit there, not doing the plant any good. If you are in a soilless mix, pH in the range of 5.5-6.1 is necessary. It is only within these ranges that all the nutrients are mobile, are able to be broken free of their salt bonds and be in the form that can go into the plants. Most soils and systems are designed so that you can apply liquids at a lower pH and then the soil or the soilless mix causes a drift, so that the pH can visit each spot in the usable pH range for that medium, and all of the 17 needed nutrients will be picked up, each in its turn.


I hope that this study on containers, watering and pH helps someone who reads it. This paper was a result of having to explain these same concepts over and over and over again to new growers at they hit the forums, until finally I put all these thoughts together into this paper. Some of the thoughts previously given have also been refined for this publication, as questions were asked and answered the last time I posted it, and I have learned better ways of explaining my thoughts. Here, I give you, approximately draft 10 of this paper.


Be well everyone and blessings from my garden to yours,
Sense Emilya
Now if I can just get the PH thing. Got new meter just have to spend time learning.
 
Hi, if you
I don't, but I should. I have made a clumsy effort to describe it in the watering thread, but I have found many people misunderstand what I tried to explain. Let me try it again here.

You have just planted the seedling and are waiting for it to come up. Water is critical to make this happen, but not too much water. Before I planted the seed, I water the cup of soil filled to about an inch from the top, to the point of runoff. I make a little divot in the wet soil and place my seed in there. Then I cover the seed with dry new soil (usually Happy Frog) about another half inch. I have a little sprayer and twice a day, morning and night, I spray 10 good squirts right where I think the seed is. The very first time, with totally dry soil on top, I give it 20 squirts.

Morning and night, 10 squirts until they come up and then for another day, just 10 squirts right where they are. Then look down from above at your new seedling. Imagine a circle that the plant can fit inside. Triple the size of that circle, and give 20 squirts all around inside that circle, twice a day. The next day, re-evaluate the size of the new circle and give 20 more squirts. The soil is getting pretty wet by now, but you still are a ways from runoff.

By the third day or so, the imagined circle around the plant will be very close to the edges of the cup by the time you go 3x larger with it. If you have reached this milestone or reasonably close to it, it is time for your first proper watering of the cup. Water it to runoff.

Now, make the plant work for the next drink. It will typically take 5 days before the cup is getting pretty light. There is still some water weight in there, but its minimal. I usually water early this first time, and water on the 5th or 6th day, again to runoff.

The next cycle will go much faster. The plant will start shaving whole days off of this watering cycle, every time you successfully go through another cycle. Keep making the plant work for the water, and soon she will develop such strong roots that she will be able to drain the cup in 48 hours or less. You can uppot to the next container any time after that, and continue using this water cycle to force the plant to grow roots in the containers. I find that the plants are growing so rapidly at this point, that usually my first topping will happen while still in the solo cup.

Does high/low RH change any of this?

If you're using root stimulator is that present in every watering?

Also silly question - If my pot is half the size do I give half as many sprays?

Thanks!
 
Does high/low RH change any of this?

If you're using root stimulator is that present in every watering?

Also silly question - If my pot is half the size do I give half as many sprays?

Thanks!
Hi Mat,
The surrounding RH has very little to do with this, here it is more about moisture content in the soil and providing just enough so that a little starts to flow down to the bottom, showing the new roots where to go.

I think root stimulator is a great thing to use when you are trying to stimulate roots to grow.

Half the sprays in half the sized pot seems logical. The goal is not to saturate the soil, but to provide just enough moisture to get things going.
 
Is it possible to see an image of the watering can/device you use @Emilya Green ? I have a difficult time soaking the entire surface evenly with the watering can I have and the sprinkler one I have is too large for the smaller pots.
Second!
I need a good watering can, and cannot find one here (so I will have to have one shipped, and would like to know which one you are using).
Thanks!
 
Flowering addendum:


It seems upon gaining more knowledge and experience; I have found that my watering guide is lacking a complete explanation of the process all the way from seed to harvest. Although everything said above is valid in veg, there is a point in the grow where things must change in order to give the plants everything that they want. Also, this watering discussion was meant to cover all container grows, but upon more experimentation with cloth grow bags (smart pots and the various clones) it became clear that the rules change a bit when using these cloth bags. Instead of adding a qualifier that this watering guide is only valid in hard sided containers, I decided to cover what happens in smart pots too.


First, let’s look at our goals in veg. We are attempting to build as big and robust of a plant as we can to take to flower, and we do this by concentrating on developing a strong rootball. We tease out the watering and entice the plant to grow more roots, by forcing the plants to find the last bit of water on every wet/dry cycle. There is an adage in the plant (and coincidentally in the metaphysical world) that says, “As above, so below.” We can interpret this to mean that as long as the plant is growing in width and height, so are the roots. When we flip to bloom, the plants dramatically stretch, and of course, the roots below are also stretching. There is a point however, about 2 weeks into bloom when all this stretching stops, TOP AND BOTTOM.


ShiggityFlip coined the adage first, and I now use this to explain the bloom part of watering. We build roots in Veg and use them in flower. – ShiggityFlip


As soon as the goal is no longer to grow new roots and the vertical and horizontal growth of the plant has mostly stopped, it is then time to USE those roots. I have found that my plants thrive best in bloom when I switch gears and stop trying to dry them out, and instead try to keep them damp inside the core of the rootball. I finally give credit to the knuckle waterers, and concede that when in bloom, when the top roots dry out, it is time to water.


Smart Pots:
It is also clear that to completely cover container watering, we have smart pots to consider. If you use these bags correctly, by allowing air flow on all sides, including the bottom, amazing things happen. First, the rootball produced in one of these bags is far superior to anything else I have been able to produce in a hard sided container, whether they be round, octagonal, square… air pruning works. Because you get more roots and better air absorption, your plants go crazy in one of these bags if you let them. I find that I am watering every other day in 5 and 7 gallon smart bags, and the plants are taking 90% of what they would have taken if I had allowed them to dry out completely in 4 or 5 days. Water use has exploded in my tent in bloom, and by keeping up with it, reading the plants and giving them what they ask for, I have the biggest and healthiest buds that I have ever seen at this point in a grow. For flower, I find that I have to modify the lift method, and change it to not waiting for feather light as we do in veg, but in just becoming “lighter.” After two days, popping my finger in the top to the middle knuckle confirms that the top root mass has become dry, and with those two criteria met, I water to runoff. At the present time, my 6 plants are using about 25 gallons of water a week, at least twice what I have ever given my plants.


Summary:
So, no matter the type and size of container, watering needs change once bloom has started and the stretch has ended. Don’t be afraid to water more often in flower. If you keep letting her dry out, she can handle that too, because she is a weed, but if you really want to see her thrive, “use” those roots in flower, and give her all the water she can take. This doesn’t mean watering 5 times a day every day… she can’t take that much… but if you have done well, flowering roots can take a lot more water than vegging roots can. Change the equation that is valid in veg, that wilting is better than overwatering, and try instead to give water every time the top and sides dry out and the lift method tells you that “most” of the water is gone,. You WILL see the difference.
Emilya, in this addendum you have for Smart Pots, you are talking about changing the lift method to "just becoming lighter" when the plants are in flower. But you still wait until Smart Pots are feather light to water them in Veg, correct?
 
Emilya, in this addendum you have for Smart Pots, you are talking about changing the lift method to "just becoming lighter" when the plants are in flower. But you still wait until Smart Pots are feather light to water them in Veg, correct?
Yes.. You’re looking to have a wet dry cycle in Veg all the way through flower stretch. Flower day 21ish (once your stretch stops) is when you want to shift gears and begin keeping the roots moist.
 
Emilya, in this addendum you have for Smart Pots, you are talking about changing the lift method to "just becoming lighter" when the plants are in flower. But you still wait until Smart Pots are feather light to water them in Veg, correct?
Yes.. You’re looking to have a wet dry cycle in Veg all the way through flower stretch. Flower day 21ish (once your stretch stops) is when you want to shift gears and begin keeping the roots moist.
Thank you Keffka, you have it exactly right. And jokerlola, smart pots or hard sided pots, it works the same way. Generally the "just becoming lighter" translates to watering a day earlier than I would have early following the strict wet/dry cycle guidelines. If I am at a 3 day wet/dry cycle at the end of stretch, I will water them every 2 days while in bloom.
 
Thank you Keffka, you have it exactly right. And jokerlola, smart pots or hard sided pots, it works the same way. Generally the "just becoming lighter" translates to watering a day earlier than I would have early following the strict wet/dry cycle guidelines. If I am at a 3 day wet/dry cycle at the end of stretch, I will water them every 2 days while in bloom.
OK. Thanks for the clarification. I had been continuing the wet/dry cycle in flower, after the stretch and should have been watering more often. I will change that with next year's grow.
 
The Proper Way to Water a Potted Plant
Also covered: the importance of pH and why we successively up-pot


How to Water
Over the last several years I have put a lot of study into this, and I feel that I can now define the proper way to water a potted plant. Keep in mind that this discussion applies to at least 3 gallon containers and bigger. Please realize that this special plant of ours does not grow like anything else you have ever tried to grow, and no matter how good you are at growing peas, beans and tomatoes, you will have to change your methods to grow a weed.


The first rule of watering is to always water slowly, using no more than a quart at a time, pausing often to let the soil suck air in behind the water as it pools on the top. For me, that involves a routine of watering each of my plants with 1 quart, then taking a nice relaxing drink of whatever beverage I have brought with me to the tent. Then I take a deep breath, making sure to exhale deeply onto this plant, letting her know that I love her. After this, I take a nice big hit off of the pipe that also followed me into the tent, and then after a nice pause and maybe another drink, I go back to plant #1 and repeat the cycle. For 2 rounds, I water the entire surface of the soil, watching it pool up and get sucked down.


After this initial wetting of the top, my watering method changes a bit. Now, I want to do whatever I can to make the outside edges of the container, the wettest areas. Still only using a quart at a time, I now carefully water only there, all around the plant, only on the edges. While doing this, I slow down a bit so that the water doesn't pool as much in the center, always concentrating on the edges. The center will end up getting some too, and that's fine, but the wettest areas of the pot will be on the outside edges and you will be driving nutrient rich soil into the dense original root ball. Continue this, again going slow, maybe with a deep breath in the middle of it, and then continue all around, taking drinks, deep breaths and hits in between each round. Continue until you see the first signs of runoff, and then stop.


Look carefully at the surface of your container now. You will clearly see where the root ball is from your last transplant, because it will now be sticking up just a little bit above the original outer rim. Very fine soil has been driven through the original root ball with the flow of water and soil from the outer edges. This micro fine soil is very rich with nutrients because of its mobility. When you water from the outside edges, you force this micro fine sludge into the dense root ball, where it can do the most good. Once you establish this flow pattern in the container, you can be assured of totally replacing the micro soil in the center of the root ball with new soil, every time you water. Watering in the normal way does not create his circular flow, and root growth cannot be nearly as aggressive.
soil_with_arrow_640_1_.png

Lastly, take one last quart of water, and water very very slowly, just in the raised area where the original root ball is. As you do so, watch what happens at the outer edge of the original root ball.

You will see the very finest soil, almost a mud, migrating out of the old root ball, and into the middle! This completes the process of soil exchange in the container. In this manner, all the roots get to take advantage of the nutrients in the soil, and the roots follow the migration of the nutrient rich soil, toward the outer edges, creating lateral growth. I strive to actively drive the soil out of the middle, making room for the roots to grow more dense and bigger there, and as they do, the lateral growth also has to increase. Using this method, I have seen a steady increase in the amount of water needed to get to run off throughout the grow and by the end, plants watered in this way use approximately 30% more water than is seen using standard watering techniques. Watering in the manner I have described allows for a constant circular flow of soil throughout the container and will create an extremely dense root ball.
proper_potted_plant_number_2.jpg



Now it is time for a truism. It is best to water the roots, not the plant. A healthy and robust root system means a happy and productive plant. Neglect the roots and your plants can die, and certainly will be less than they could have been.

When do we water?
By far, one of the most common plant problems that I see with new gardeners is a lack of understanding as to when to water. New people get it set in their mind that watering every day or every other day is best, or that somehow, mysteriously, they know in their own human minds exactly how much water the plants need. These well-meaning new gardeners will determine that they will give exactly one quart or some other random amount, each time, no more... and no less, and really believe that they are doing a good thing for their plants, making these decisions for them.
Just as bad as these over-thinkers are the tomato gardeners, the "stick your finger in the ground" crowd, who proclaim: it's time to water when it is dry below the second knuckle. What they fail to realize is that when the top 2 inches is dry, the lower half of the container could still be saturated with water. Both of these common mistakes in watering methods are quick ways to drown your plants. These methods are not correct for growing weeds, and using them can actually kill your plants.


Marijuana is a weed, and the main thing that this scientific term refers to, is a class of plant that thrives in adversity. In order to grow it well, you need to understand that this incredibly robust plant works differently than other, less hardy plants. It is an extremely aggressive grower if you allow it to be, and to grow prize winning pot, you need to use its abilities to send out new roots to your advantage.


Watering incorrectly is the most common mistake that new weed farmers make. This plant needs a clear wet/dry cycle in order to thrive. If you keep it moist, you will kill it. The roots will aggressively chase your water, whatever you give them. If you just give a small amount every couple of days, that water will drop right to the bottom of the container. Your roots will follow, and will cluster on the bottom, instead of growing laterally throughout the container, and since they continually sit in the nutrient rich water, the plant sees little need to grow additional roots. How you water makes a huge difference in the formation of the root ball, and how this development happens is up to you.


There are many ways to tell when it is time to water, and if you wait long enough the girls will actually tell you that they are thirsty. They do two things when they see that they need water, they throw out a smell, and they begin to wilt, starting at the bottom, moving up. You can also use the lift method to tell when the container is dry, and almost always you will "feel" a dry container, before the above mentioned wilt and fragrance pump happens. Rusty Trichome taught me an important lesson; every time I think that I need to do something to my plants, I wait a bit... and I try to move at the speed that my plants are moving. "Patience, above all else." --Rusty


If you have a moisture meter you can also use it to find where the wet/dry (water table) line is in your container, and you can watch that wet/dry line move down over time. I used to graph my water table level by day, so that I could project ahead when the wet dry line would reach the last inch of container. Your wet/dry line will never go lower than that last inch or so, because once you get down in there, you are in all the big tap roots and mass at the bottom, and it tends to stay wet there longer because of capillary effect. Again, if you wait for the first sign of wilt and that perfume pump that happens at "water me" point, it will usually be just a bit longer than your measurements would indicate. Once the water table line is anywhere in that bottom inch is ok to water. You have dried out 95% of the water by that time and the roots have been chasing it as the wet/dry line progresses both downward and outward. The suction caused by the diaphragm that is the water table, will have pulled oxygen down deep into the container, and filled any voids. The roots will be happy.


Why do we up-pot?
The art of successive up-potting is important in growing a healthy root system. People like to be lazy. I am constantly seeing new gardeners take a little sprig of a weed and put it in a big 3 or 5 gallon container, thinking that they have done a good thing, and are now done with it... it's on to harvest time! The problem is, this doesn't work, because it gives you zero control over developing the roots, and without crazy watering techniques, almost no chance of a solid root ball forming. It is imperative to successively up pot your plants through stages so that the root system can roughly take on the same size and shape as the plant in order to get the maximum productivity. The roots grow aggressively in these weeds, and if you confine them to a container the size of the plant, they will fill that space in a short time with a dense root system. Putting a plant in an oversized container can and often does, result in all the roots going to the bottom, drowning the plant, root rot and overall poor health because of a lack of a root ball, and certainly less than optimum harvests. It is important to force these weeds into producing a root ball at various stages, to give the plant the ability later on to take in the massive amounts of nutrients needed to produce lots of quality buds.
The plants in the smaller containers can also more directly show you when they are thriving or more importantly when they are not. A strong healthy plant will eventually outgrow its container and an observant gardener is carefully watching the length of time between wet/dry cycles, and directly relating shorter cycles with more robust roots. A smaller container also gives the gardener the ability to see when the moment arrives that the amount of soil the plant is in is no longer large enough for the plant's abilities to be happy in it, because it will be obvious when the plant can drain the water that soil is able to hold, in less than 24 hours. Your soil and your container at that point have ceased at that point to be a good enough buffer, and it is time to double the space the roots have to work with. Let your plant show you when that time is, and try not to make decisions for her.


Why is pH important?
Some people claim that pH is not important, and if you are a pure organic gardener, never applying chlorinated water or salt based synthetic nutrients at your plants, pH indeed is not important. For the 99.9% rest of the world, a very important lesson for the new gardener to learn is the importance of pH. There is a scientific reason why a proper pH allows the plants to use synthetic nutrients, and why being outside of the proper range can cause deficiencies. If you want to grow pot using chemicals, you need to invest in a method to test the pH of any water going into the plant, whether it is plain water or water mixed with nutrients, and whether it is applied to the roots or sprayed on the leaves. If you neglect the pH, you can easily create deficiencies in your plants, and if left unchecked, you can even kill them. If you spend a lot of money on nutrients, it makes sense that you would want to also create the proper environment so that the plant can use these nutrients, but with a pH way out of the 6.3-6.8 range in soil, a lot of those expensive nutrients will just sit there, not doing the plant any good. If you are in a soilless mix, pH in the range of 5.5-6.1 is necessary. It is only within these ranges that all the nutrients are mobile, are able to be broken free of their salt bonds and be in the form that can go into the plants. Most soils and systems are designed so that you can apply liquids at a lower pH and then the soil or the soilless mix causes a drift, so that the pH can visit each spot in the usable pH range for that medium, and all of the 17 needed nutrients will be picked up, each in its turn.


I hope that this study on containers, watering and pH helps someone who reads it. This paper was a result of having to explain these same concepts over and over and over again to new growers at they hit the forums, until finally I put all these thoughts together into this paper. Some of the thoughts previously given have also been refined for this publication, as questions were asked and answered the last time I posted it, and I have learned better ways of explaining my thoughts. Here, I give you, approximately draft 10 of this paper.


Be well everyone and blessings from my garden to yours,
Sense Emilya
I've read that paper so many times, since I've been watering this way big improvement on my grows and of coarse the coffee and a joint when watering is the best part 😉peace..
 
some guys have it, but not many. I can smell and taste flavors in the pot that my male friends can not, even when I describe it to them. Girls can also see many shades of colors, especially yellows and greens, that guys can not tell the difference between. Ever wonder why in nature the males are always the prettiest and most unique? It's so us girls can tell you all apart.
Us girls basically rock. ✌️I mean, guys are ok and all...some of my favorite people are guys...but us girls! Yay 😁
 
I was reading one of my posts from a couple of years ago and found this to be so good, I wanted to repeat it here for all the readers of my watering thread to see. Have a nice day everyone!

Many times I have met people who think they are following my method, and it sounds like you are one of them who are trying, but are afraid to take it as far as I recommend, as in your comment, "want to be sure to dont wait too much."

The entire point of my method is to stress the plants. You want them to run out of water. When they sense they are running out of water, they grow new roots, so as to find more water. If you don't take your weeds to this point, they become lazy, not having to seek out water, and their root systems do not grow nearly as much as a properly watered plant.

If you are not thinking that you must be killing your plants at the end because the soil has pulled away from the sides and appears to be as dry as the sahara desert, then you are probably overwatering.

if your human senses upon lifting the container can feel ANY water weight at all... not just lighter, but ANY water weight at all, and you water anyway, you are probably overwatering.

If the leaves are not all lifting up in a "praying" position, reaching up to the lights, at least during most of the daytime, you are probably overwatering.

if you have never walked into the room to see every leaf on your vegging plant drooping as if it were about to die, you are probably overwatering.

Lastly, if you don't think you are being just a little bit cruel to your girls, then you are probably overwatering.
:peacetwo: :ganjamon:
 
I was reading one of my posts from a couple of years ago and found this to be so good, I wanted to repeat it here for all the readers of my watering thread to see. Have a nice day everyone!


:peacetwo: :ganjamon:


This response is where I pulled the lazy analogy from! I couldn’t remember where I read it but it makes total sense when you view our plant in its natural form. I will always remember your explanation of what a weed is, since it was far better than my initial western outlook that it was an unwanted eyesore.

“A plant that thrives in adversity”

Remembering that quote will go a long way in how we should treat this gift we have and how we should approach feeding it.

Too often we humans want to place our perspective and perceptions on other life forms without regard to the fact that these are living beings themselves that have also evolved over millions of years.
 
Why isn't this post in 420's Everything You Need to Know forum? :cool: Seriously. Back in the day when I was a Helicopter Mom I could have used this simple tough love wisdom. I've been rereading my first grow, laughing at my mistakes and unintended consequences. Like getting gnats. The likelihood of getting them would have been closer to 0 if I would have dried my babies out properly. It still could have happened, sure, but now that I am not invested I can remember the only time my regular houseplants got gnats was when my roommate and I were both watering them. We had to dry those babies out to almost killer stress to get rid of them. After that, we flipped a coin and I won the responsibility to be the only one to water.:high-five:

You rock, Emilya!
 
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