Rooting Hormone for Transplanting

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member

Pimpjuice9906

Well-Known Member
I am seasoned, or used commercial organic soil. I add my own leaf and wood fungus from oak leaves and bark. I get your thought. Yet that product is not from your location. I suggest learning to use native goodies.

Best wishes.
I live in the woods with a nice compost pile. I burn wood in my gasification boiler and insert fireplace. What information is available to learn?
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
I live in the woods with a nice compost pile. I burn wood in my gasification boiler and insert fireplace. What information is available to learn?
It is sporadic and scattered. I've used white oak leaves and bark for over a decade. And introduced my hardwood ashes and remains as bio char. It is a feel as you go here. The compost is great. Bio char sucks nutes before it releases them. It can build up. But char and wood fungus make better plants.
 

ChrispyCritter

Well-Known Member
VAM by BioAg is what I use when I plant my seeds and when I transplant. I sprinkle some into the hole I'm transplanting to and as the roots grow they grow through the VAM and the magic starts.
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
Shouldn't really transplant autos. Put autos in the pot you wanna finish with just water a little bit less not to drown them. Autos flipping to flower around 4 weeks don't take to well to transplanting. It can be done obviously but better off not shocking them cause they have so little time to recover before flower. You want your autos stress free from start to finish to get the most out of them. Imo
This is just bad information. Please stop giving advice if it's anything like this...

I can give photo after photo of transplanted autos that turned out fine. I don't understand the reluctance to transplanting. You might stress a plant transplanting if you're Edward Scissorhands but other than that the worry isn't warranted.
 
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