Looks OK to me.
I top them long before they get to this stage.
What stage is that? I did exactly what UB said and waited till she got to 5-6 nodes.I top them long before they get to this stage.
your plant looks great, done the same thing often myselfWhat stage is that? I did exactly what UB said and waited till she got to 5-6 nodes.
I find if you air prune the roots in rockwool blocks the plant can have a lot of root in a short time in the block and leads a more robust plant overall (genetics permitting off course) and top about the 4th node.What stage is that? I did exactly what UB said and waited till she got to 5-6 nodes.
No. I waited till 5-6 nodes. Set of nodes? I don't know why what you're saying is so confusing. I don't know anything about "sets" of nodes....just nodes.your plant looks great, done the same thing often myself
but correct me, if I got this wrong but if UB said 5-6 nodes or you could say the 3rd set of nodes
and it looks like you waited till the 5-6 set of nodes, guessing 11-12 node before removing the top 7-8 nodes leaving you with 4 nodes or 2 sets of nodes which will give you 4 top shoots
so you didn't follow uncle Ben's advice
@jacksthcWith indica strains the nodes grow even (looks like a pair one each side of the main shoot ) each one at the top part the plant will become the top shoot
The pictures are showing where the nodes grow and in the picture there is 4 nodes
That picture is showing two leaf sets, each individual leaf set is stemming from a node. So that picture shows two nodes.With indica strains the nodes grow even (looks like a pair one each side of the main shoot ) each one at the top part the plant will become the top shoot
The pictures are showing where the nodes grow and in the picture there is 4 nodes
No don't get what you saying at all there are 4 leave soon to become fan leave that will support each node that grows next to it so with so 4 leaves 4 nodes this is basic stuff everyone needs to know
I'm using the same wording that is in the first post of this thread. It says to pinch or cut above the 2nd true node (opposing leaf set). Like this pic posted by @Uncle Ben in post #30...So when the plants have 5 leaves/nodes you remove the top node
The top nodes or pair of nodes will give 4 nodes/shoots left
If I'm wrong then please point me towards the appropriate links.you may need to read up on this your self
uncle bens indicas stretch 3ft because he's a nitrogen whore . its the same when I use H&Ggreat pics
In the past when I said about remove a few leaves it was to give a plant that was strong like an indica mutt but a deeper canopy like the sativa plant with thicker stems, somwhere in the middle, you do it by hand or grow a 50% hybrid indica/sativa to give better yeilds and larger canopy
its all about getting the canopy shape just right
It good you have an open mind and share a lot of good knowledge with members on here
that's why I saidLol anyyyywho....Besides all the commotion, my topped plant looks AMAZING. Just 5 days ago I topped her and she looked all beat up. Now she's lookin' purrty. Can't wait to see the results of this technique. Thanks UB and everyone else responding!
Before
View attachment 3215639
After
View attachment 3215638
its all good, as it grows, tie the shoots down so it looks like an x shape and keep them all the same height if you can
you will have 4 top shoots before you know it
I don't use orthene and wouldn't because it's not needed plus I consider it not safe for personal consumption. With the imidacloprid 1/4 tsp/gal. just enough to saturate the pot with a little runoff.ub when you're mixing both the orthene & Imidacloprid as a soil drench,what rates per gal you use??
Yeah, it's all a judgement call. I only use the 5th or 6th node as a guide. Usually by then the plant is well into it's latter juvenile stage with full term leafsets meaning the root system should be good too. I could top when the plant has 3 nodes or 8 and get the same result.I find if you air prune the roots in rockwool blocks the plant can have a lot of root in a short time in the block and leads a more robust plant overall (genetics permitting off course) and top about the 4th node.