Wardrobe Grow - CFL- Only - Auto Mazar + Rescued Cannatonic + Dieseltonic

Flipin flip you have been working hard Sir night of 420
They look very nice,

but dont they need a lot of leaves to help them do there magic,

I always worry about de leafing just in case I take off the wrong ones:grinjoint:

There are no Right or Wrong leaves.


The plant is one, as am I.


Look and listen and you will see and hear.

I'm seeing how early one can de-leaf them.


Pointless seedling is how old?

Get em young and they get used to growing leaves

Get em late you get leafy buds :xmas:
 
Pointless seedling is a girl! she told me so!
Happy Munchday Rico:cheertwo:
 
rumor
 
:;)::;)::)
 
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Bendy roundy :ciao:

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Loopty has high hopes of turning Japanese in future

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:ciao:

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Oh you are soooo lazy Pointless seedling.

Just lying around there.

Why don't you get a job or something?

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:xmas:
 
There are no Right or Wrong leaves.


The plant is one, as am I.


Look and listen and you will see and hear.

I'm seeing how early one can de-leaf them.


Pointless seedling is how old?

Get em young and they get used to growing leaves

Get em late you get leafy buds :xmas:

Really but for a rokie like me I think any defol I do will be a little later on in the story:grinjoint:

By the by how is pointless seedling since her scalping ahem I mean defoliation any pic,s today :grinjoint:
 
how is pointless seedling since her scalping ahem I mean defoliation any pic,s today :grinjoint:

That is Pointless seedling :)

All pics are from today, Jaga :)

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She is always growing, Jaga.

If you pinch off the big leaves at the top when she is bent over,

she grows new leaves where she wouldn't normally
 
Cut down to size now.

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Chaos Cannatonic calmed.

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But all is not good.

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New growth covers old wounds, as new death appears.

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What lurks beneath and troubles Mr. Squirryl?

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Dieseltonic is sick again!

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:straightface:

On a plus note,

I have no more insects in this greenhouse.

Did you know that garlic is sold as an insecticide:)
 
I got some soil ammendments, including

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3.5%, 18%, 7.7%

And some
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And A seaweed and fish-meal soil amendment with coral

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See where it says "Calcium enriched"?

Except they don't list any calcium here!

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WTF???? :partyboy:

I got a bag of vermiculite and a bag of perlite and Blood, bone Fish, with 5% all over.

and I have loads of cheap soil to experiment with as well as coco coir :)

an unexpected surprise, Wool :xmas:

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Here is a Wall of text about how groovy sheepswool is as a soil amendment:

The addition of wool to organic and mineral components of growing substrates

changes their chemical and physical properties.
Wool is a rich source of important
nutrients for plant growth. It contains high quantities of
nitrogen, sulphur and carbon [9]. As a result of partial


break-down of wool, keratinous materials are formed
which may be purposely produced, e.g. in the process of

alkaline hydrolysis [10]. Keratins are easily available
sources of nutrients and can be used for the development of
slow-release fertilizers [11].

Wool-containing media are lighter and their air-water relations are modified [12, 13].
The results depend on wool rate per unit of substrate volume.

The expected advantages of wool addition to growing media would be
inhibited leaching of nutrients and betternutrient utilization,

suitability for combining with different organic and inorganic compounds
and creating more desired physical properties of media.

Plants were grown individually in containers. It was stated that the addition ofwool caused up to 33% higher yields, especially for tomato and pepper. Wool amendment caused changes in
nutrients content of substrate and leaves. Thus, sheep wool can serve as a valuable and environmentally friendly fertilizer.


The availability of fertilisers for organic farming is often limited and not standardised. In Germany, high amounts of uncleaned sheep wool are available. Because of the high amount of nutrients - especially nitrogen -, sheep wool pellets could be used as multi-functional fertiliser in vegetable and flower cultivations. Four sheep wool pellet types with a total nitrogen content of 10 to 11% DM and different supplements (10% cellulose, 20% potato starch, 20% casein) have been tested in open and protected cultivation. Tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) were cultivated in greenhouse using substrate culture with perlite, bark compost and sheep wool slabs, respectively, and sheep wool pellets as fertiliser. Kohlrabi (Brassica oleracea var. gongylodes L.) and iceberg lettuce (Lactuca sativa var. capitata nidus Jagg.) were cultivated in the field comparing the effect of mineral and organic fertilisers (sheep wool pellets, lupine and ricinus wholemeal). In flower pot cultivation, different amounts of pellets were investigated with poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima Willd.). In most experiments, a stimulating effect of the pellets on growth and yield could be determined in comparison with mineral and other organic fertilisers. In cultivation of iceberg lettuce, the best results in all quantitative and qualitative parameters were obtained when using pellets as a fertiliser.
 
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