- Thread starter
- #21
Phototropic
Well-Known Member
Day 30 since germ.
I love putting my hands in that FoxFarm soil. So fresh feeling. And i was a kid who hated the texture of dirt.
Decided to transplant into final containers as i will be taking a 3 day trip and I'm worried about leaving my girls without their daily watering. This way, i can overwater the container and the roots themselves don't need to be soaked. The excess water in the soil will get to the roots as they drink the nearest water. I think it was time anyways as i hope you will agree by the pictures below. The roots of Ethel had reached the bottom of her container. Lucy was about the same but i neglected the picture. Let me know your thoughts.
They look nice in the bigger pots. Small, but i think they fit and will hopefully enjoy growing into the space.
This did require me to spread the scoop lights a little so each plant lost the benefit of sharing the other's light. Not sure how this will affect them but hopefully they each had an over-abundance of light when they were tight, and now they each have a suitable amount spread out. Time shall tell.
I also took the time to tie down Ethel's topping chutes. The best office supply ever is a binder clip. So that's clipped at two sides to the smart pots with twist tie connecting the chutes to the clips. Lucy needs to grow a little longer before there is enough new stem to bend. Don't want to risk breaking another of her leaves.
Did some undergrowth pruning as well. Snipped some three-finger leaves that are growing at the bottom.
Do the smaller leaves always grow at the bottom nodes? Do the 5-7 finger leaves never develop at the lowest nodes? I was expecting that i would stop seeing three-fingers altogether as the plant matured.
So now i am out on my porch enjoying some good scotch and a pipe of legal plants fawning over the pictures of my pretty ladies and imagining the (hopefully) bountiful harvest i am working toward.
Enjoy the pictures with me:
Lucy
Ethel
I love putting my hands in that FoxFarm soil. So fresh feeling. And i was a kid who hated the texture of dirt.
Decided to transplant into final containers as i will be taking a 3 day trip and I'm worried about leaving my girls without their daily watering. This way, i can overwater the container and the roots themselves don't need to be soaked. The excess water in the soil will get to the roots as they drink the nearest water. I think it was time anyways as i hope you will agree by the pictures below. The roots of Ethel had reached the bottom of her container. Lucy was about the same but i neglected the picture. Let me know your thoughts.
They look nice in the bigger pots. Small, but i think they fit and will hopefully enjoy growing into the space.
This did require me to spread the scoop lights a little so each plant lost the benefit of sharing the other's light. Not sure how this will affect them but hopefully they each had an over-abundance of light when they were tight, and now they each have a suitable amount spread out. Time shall tell.
I also took the time to tie down Ethel's topping chutes. The best office supply ever is a binder clip. So that's clipped at two sides to the smart pots with twist tie connecting the chutes to the clips. Lucy needs to grow a little longer before there is enough new stem to bend. Don't want to risk breaking another of her leaves.
Did some undergrowth pruning as well. Snipped some three-finger leaves that are growing at the bottom.
Do the smaller leaves always grow at the bottom nodes? Do the 5-7 finger leaves never develop at the lowest nodes? I was expecting that i would stop seeing three-fingers altogether as the plant matured.
So now i am out on my porch enjoying some good scotch and a pipe of legal plants fawning over the pictures of my pretty ladies and imagining the (hopefully) bountiful harvest i am working toward.
Enjoy the pictures with me:
Lucy
Ethel