Watering coco coir

Erinr8

Member
I have an autoflower in which I started in a 5gal pot of coco coir and perlite. I pre watered the soil before any planting to make sure it's not dry for planting. I know 5gal seems a lot for a seedling, but everything I've read online says autoflower shouldn't be transplanted and should start and end in the same pot, between 3-5 gal. I chose 5gal because my last auto in 3gal didnt do well.

My question is, what should I do if the pot is still heavy with water after 3 weeks? My plant looks fine, so I'm not sure how to get it to dry out so I can get on a normal watering cycle. I'll attach a pic to show plant quality.
 

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Keeprollinup

Well-Known Member
Only thing I can say is.let it dry if you can poke loads of little holes in the coco all over obviously not thought the roots and put a fan blowing on them and up your temp to around 84 should help it dry out faster.
 

Erinr8

Member
Only thing I can say is.let it dry if you can poke loads of little holes in the coco all over obviously not thought the roots and put a fan blowing on them and up your temp to around 84 should help it dry out faster.
Awesome, I have a water meter for soil that pokes holes so I will use that and aim the fan. Thanks so much!
 

Erinr8

Member
Erin,
When you put a small plant in a large pot...only water right around the plant. You already found out what happens when you saturate the whole pot.

You received some good advice on drying.
Good luck,
JD
Thats how I've been watering, but I think my problem is never letting it dry out originally. Thanks JD
 

JohnDee

Well-Known Member
Erin, Damp coco doesn't hurt anything but best not to have it dripping wet. Just use lass water next time. Keep feeding the little gal and it'll work out.
JD
 

MickFoster

Well-Known Member
I know 5gal seems a lot for a seedling, but everything I've read online says autoflower shouldn't be transplanted and should start and end in the same pot, between 3-5 gal.
Even Mephisto, who specializes in autos only, recommends starting in a smaller pot and transplanting. The "don't transplant autos" is a bunch of crap perpetuated by an unknown idiot.
Good luck.

PS - I hope you're not using plain water.
 

JohnDee

Well-Known Member
Good morning Erin...and happy 4/20,
I up-pot coco all the time. I'm getting the hang of it. Trick is to let the roots fill the pot, wait till it's super dry and when I turn it upside down and slap the bottom...the whole intact rootball pops out with no damage to roots. I can't imagine that that would delay an auto...but I don't grow them...
Cheers
JD
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Even Mephisto, who specializes in autos only, recommends starting in a smaller pot and transplanting. The "don't transplant autos" is a bunch of crap perpetuated by an unknown idiot.
Good luck.

PS - I hope you're not using plain water.
Stoner Science
 

Erinr8

Member
Even Mephisto, who specializes in autos only, recommends starting in a smaller pot and transplanting. The "don't transplant autos" is a bunch of crap perpetuated by an unknown idiot.
Good luck.

PS - I hope you're not using plain water.
I'm not using plain water. I adjusted my nutrients and am on a schedule, it's always proper ph and added nutrients, bloom and foliage pro by dyna-gro. I have cut back on the cal mag because I got an ec reader and found that my tap water is high in calcium already.
 
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