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FoNz
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Yea, all photoperiods too to start seeking out perennial favorites to keep mothers of
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I know, I'm kinda still processing it. I didn't think I'd have any plants that significant but it is really difficult to tell because I only have pictures to go off of, and scaling can be difficult to tell in some pictures.Holy moly FoNz, your harvesting dreams man! Haha 7 ounces is my heaviest plant indoors to date.
Here's some. I'll find the rest.@stoneotter you got any final dry weights from your Four Fine Fall Phillies yet? I was gonna post in your thread but you wrote such a nice conclusion post that I didn't want to ruin it
So far your per plant average is 5.6, I might only end up with ~24 oz or so which would be less than 5oz per plant average. So unless I get another plant with a weight like Connie then your grow is gonna come out on top!Here we go FoNz my finals for the fall phillies are:
White Rhino 6 oz
Strawberry Cough 6 oz
Gorilla Bomb 5.5 oz
CBD Cream and Cheese 4.8 oz
For a total of 22.3 oz.. A tent weight record grow for me. Thanks to this green family we have here. Yourself included. The only better news is the weight of your grow!
Look up "no till" and see that people do this all the time. If I run a 7 gal container or larger I know good and well that all the layers and spikes and other goodness that I packed into that soil are still there and plenty of raw materials are left over after one plant's attempts to use them all. I will run a container like this twice, almost every time, and I notice no loss of quality in the second run as a result. I simply pull the main center mass of the rootball out of the container and transplant the next one into that hole.I've got a question for @Emilya when she's around. Trying to decide how to recycle my soil, it should still be rich enough to start a new grow. What I was wondering if I should remove and discard the roots or if there would be some value in grinding the roots and adding them in as a soil amendment?
I spent much time and effort taking care of the root mass and making sure it was cultured with beneficial bacterias and fungus, do you think the ground root could actually jump start new root development?
I'm not against experimenting with it if we don't have it documented being done.