flytier
Well-Known Member
September 01, 2017
Day 1
OK, so I'm waiting for my outdoor plants to ripen and I now have nothing growing inside.I figured that if I don't get on the go with something soon I'd be regretting it, and I've been having a difficult time growing indoors to date so I decided to try something that was bred to grow in a small space - The Dwarf Low Flyer, from Crop King
Seeds. I purchased a five-pack of seeds at a store in town in July and kept them in the fridge until today.
They'e all planted in their final containers, plain old white buckets, maybe five or six litres or so, with holes in the bottoms. Hopefully that will suffice for Low Flyers. I have no plans to train them, but depending on how they grow I may have to do a little to keep them even. That doesn't count.
The soil I'm using is mostly a mix of different prepared soils from Walmart, but I'm also using some of my secret weapon: some fish compost from work at the salmon hatchery. I've grown weed now in soil mixes with and without it and the plants that are grown in the fish compost do significantly better.
Also in the soil I put in a sprinkle each (nothing like being accurate - measure with a micrometer, mark with chalk and cut with an axe kind of thing) of nitrogen in the form of blood meal, phosphorus in the form of bone meal, potassium in the form of potash and calcium in the form of dolomite lime. I dug out a hole in the soil of each pot and filled them with plain soil with nothing added. This will give the seedlings time to get some size and strength to them before they get a strong taste of nutes.
I didn't use the paper towel method - just a bunch of unnecessary foolishness - but rather just stuck the dry seeds right into the damp soil which is what evolution selected them for. Works for me; it's how I get my best germination results. The results of that stage of it will be available within the week.
I have, I think, five strains of autos with different properties like size, THC:CBD ratio, flowering times, effect from taking it, and their intended uses.
Day 1
OK, so I'm waiting for my outdoor plants to ripen and I now have nothing growing inside.I figured that if I don't get on the go with something soon I'd be regretting it, and I've been having a difficult time growing indoors to date so I decided to try something that was bred to grow in a small space - The Dwarf Low Flyer, from Crop King
Seeds. I purchased a five-pack of seeds at a store in town in July and kept them in the fridge until today.
They'e all planted in their final containers, plain old white buckets, maybe five or six litres or so, with holes in the bottoms. Hopefully that will suffice for Low Flyers. I have no plans to train them, but depending on how they grow I may have to do a little to keep them even. That doesn't count.
The soil I'm using is mostly a mix of different prepared soils from Walmart, but I'm also using some of my secret weapon: some fish compost from work at the salmon hatchery. I've grown weed now in soil mixes with and without it and the plants that are grown in the fish compost do significantly better.
Also in the soil I put in a sprinkle each (nothing like being accurate - measure with a micrometer, mark with chalk and cut with an axe kind of thing) of nitrogen in the form of blood meal, phosphorus in the form of bone meal, potassium in the form of potash and calcium in the form of dolomite lime. I dug out a hole in the soil of each pot and filled them with plain soil with nothing added. This will give the seedlings time to get some size and strength to them before they get a strong taste of nutes.
I didn't use the paper towel method - just a bunch of unnecessary foolishness - but rather just stuck the dry seeds right into the damp soil which is what evolution selected them for. Works for me; it's how I get my best germination results. The results of that stage of it will be available within the week.
I have, I think, five strains of autos with different properties like size, THC:CBD ratio, flowering times, effect from taking it, and their intended uses.