What is stretch and how can I minimize it?

SmokeyMacPot

New Member
“Stretch” is a term for the natural vertical growth spurt in early flowering. Marijuana will grow in height throughout its flowering phase, but the first 2 weeks of flowering will show the most dramatic change in height and internodal distance. Stretch can also occur in the vegetative phase.

Stretch is generally considered an unavoidable evil, but some gardeners prefer a bit of stretch to allow budsites to fill in adequately. Buds with perfect density can be grown by controlling stretch.

Encouraging stretch can be a good technique to prevent budrot in susceptible strains and massive colas. Elongated buds are less dense, and the humidity within buds is reduced.

Note: Males will typically stretch much more than females and are easily identified and pre-sexxed by their extra height.

Why is stretch a problem?

Stretch is a problem primarily in indoor grows because it greatly reduces yield. The problem stems from the limitations of artificial light and the plant’s adaptations to low light.

Stretch also produces tall plants with weak and spindly stems. The weight of the buds later in flower will require staking to avoid damage and falling over. Stretch may be a sudden problem for growers with limited ceiling height.

Light intensity vs internodal distance

Light intensity diminishes exponentially with distance under artificial light (the inverse squared law). Sunlight is not affected by distance and can penetrate deep into a canopy.

Marijuana requires high light levels (At least 30w/ft2, preferably 50 w/ft2) to thrive and produce high yields. A plant is at its optimum flowering height when all it’s bud sites are bathed in intense light (ideally the entire plant is equally lit, producing dense bud from top to bottom).

Stretched plants are tall and their lower bud sites receive exponentially lower lumens than top colas. Budsites that are not receiving intense light will not produce well, and often the light and extra plant height is wasted. Tall plants require more energy to pump water to its leaves and transport photosynthate from its leaves. This extra energy could have gone into flowering. Stretched plants can yield 30-50% less.

Lower bud sites that are not illuminated sufficiently will produce under-developed buds: airy or popcorn bud. Popcorn buds have lower dry weight, take much longer to trim, and often have less bag appeal.

How can I minimize stretch?

Note: Some of these techniques only apply to the stretch phase.

Use a compact strain
Indicas tend to have minimal stretch growing characteristics in flower compared to tall-growing Sativas. Hybrids may grow unevenly, or react to stress unexpectedly.

Keep light at the optimum distance
Low light levels will cause seedlings and plants to stretch and produce poorly.

from: Lec 8
“….High light inhibits plant growth - plants tend to grow taller when there is less light."

Use adequate spacing
Very high planting densities will encourage stretch. As the plant grows, its leaves will quickly overlap its neighbors. Eventually the sub-canopy will darken and lower portions of the plant will experience significant shading.

from: Ornamental Plants - Annual Reports and Research Reviews: Paclobutrazol/Paint Mix on the Inside Surface of Plug Cells to Control Plug Height
"Overlapping of plant parts reduces light intensity and changes light quality, resulting in light below plant canopies that is richer in near-infrared and far-red which encourages plant stretching."

Pruning, FIM'ing and topping
Pruning plants in veg and early flower can effect the flow of auxins within the plant. Re-distributing natural growth hormones from terminal shoots to lateral shoots is a good way to slow height growth.

Note: Pruning in SOG systems is not recommended, as this promotes bushiness.

Use blue-spectrum light

Using MH light exclusively during vegetative and early flower phases will help keep internodal length shorter.

From: What do all of those lighting terms mean?
“The light produced by metal halide lamps is in the white-blue spectrum, which encourages vegetative growth and "bushiness" while discouraging upward growth. This is the bulb to use in the first, vegetative phase of plant growth.”

HPS bulbs are the preferred lighting source for flowering. However, most HPS bulbs have a harsh and limited light spectrum concentrated in the far red and IR that encourages stretching.

Growers have a variety of bulb options to increase blue light during the vegetative and early flowering phase:

# Supplemental fluorescents
# MH bulbs, or a mix of HPS to MH (3:1 recommended)
# Conversion bulbs (MH bulbs that work with HPS ballasts)
# Enhanced HPS

Minimize night/day temperature fluctuations

According to Cannabis Culture :
"Plant internodal length is directly related to the difference between day and night temperatures – the warmer your day cycle is as compared to your night cycle, the greater your internode length will be. The opposite also holds true; the closer your day and night temperatures, the shorter your internodes will be."

Minimize stress
Stretching can be a physiological reaction to a variety of environmental stresses (Low light, high humidity, low/high temperatures, transplant shock, leaf loss, etc). Maintaining optimum growing conditions is your best defense against stretch.

Anti-stretch additives
SuperBud is a popular additive to help minimize stretch and initiate flowering faster. May not be available. Expensive.

(Thanks 20kw dreams!)
Bonza Bud (contains antigibberillins) shortens internode length while helping the predominance of female flowers.

Phosphoload by Dutch Master. Apparently contains the same ingredients as Superbud.

Bush Master at BGHydro.com
"Bush Master does exactly the same thing as Phosphoload and Dutch Master SuperBud and is much less expensive."

Avoid hormones
Some foliar sprays and additives can encourage stretch. Spraying Growth Plus (containing cytokines, humic acids and vitamins) during early flower may encourage stretch. "Cytokinine - activates cell stretching..."

Use side lighting (vertical bulbs)
Untested. The Phototropic effects of side lighting may limit the amount of stretch: “…dark side of the stem grows more than the lit side of the stem.” (Lec 8)

Grower's tricks:

# Use MH lights during vegging and the first 2 weeks of flowering (during the stretch phase) for short internodes.

# Avoid high levels of Nitrogen during the stretch. Use a transition fertilizer ratio (1-1-1) during early flowering to maintain a medium level of Nitrogen.

Note: Switching immediately to a flowering ratio (A low N ratio) from veg can result in premature yellowing. Remember to flush veg ferts out first!

# Use oscillating fans to help strengthen stems


Author: snoofer
 
Picked up some interesting info . Thanks
 
all mh for veg or 3hps per 1 mh up until after stretch? ever heard of neg diff? temperature plays a very big role, but perhaps not the way the swing of day to night you mentioned from cannabis culture
 
them little girls allways smillin' in the light...they pray to their god,the sungod...bringer of life...father,the sun....they standin' on their tippytoes just wavin' in the breeze....say'n father sun oh father sun !!! I just gigglesum and watch them dance in the sunlight...
 
I use the MH bulb two weeks into flowering and then switch to HPS.
 
Stretching is GREAT! When your plant stretches to a point that is undesired you can go to the base of that stretched internode, sqeeze it to BREAK the tissue down and bend that branch to the desired angle for light penetration and the 2 new branches will start developing faster and you will have stronger branches and BIGGER BUDS than if you didnt bend the stretched branch. This technique is called SUPERCROPPING. i SUGGEST you type SUPERCROPPING in Youtube and watch some videos 1st. but the technique/concept is quite simple and IT REALLY WORKS to increase yeild.
 
i'm going to induce flowering when i am two feet from running out of vertical space
 
Thanks for so informative thread, it was really covering the detailed info about stretch which after researching had found that
Stretch is an issue fundamentally in indoor develops in light of the fact that it significantly diminishes yield. The issue comes from the restrictions of fake light and the plant's adjustments to low light.

Extend additionally delivers tall plants with feeble and spindly stems. The heaviness of the buds later in blossom will oblige staking to evade harm and falling over. Stretch may be a sudden issue for cultivators with restricted roof stature.
 
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