I am new to growing cannabis. These plants are really tall in a 9oz cup and getting ready to transplant in 5 gallon buckets. Need advise on how to transplant without breaking the stem
I would bury most of the stem........and either get better light or move it closer........the stretch is extreme.
Your plants are in flower by the way.
We have them in a very dark room with the attached inexpensive grow light we bought off Amazon. Do you have any suggestions on an inexpensive grow light or will the one we have suffice?
You can use the one you have, but don't expect much.
Consider quality lighting for your next grow.........they won't be cheap or inexpensive.
Other than maintaining a good environment, light is the most important essential for good yields.
Support the stalk with a long thin stick, like a skewer.
Lie the plant down on it's side and work off the glass.
Put the plant in a bucket with a few inches of soil (pro-mix?) in the bottom & burry her up to her chin.
Just my opinion.
That 30w light is woefully insufficient for 3 plants.
Your light cost about $1/watt, there's a lot of stuff that the same cost per watt & much better.
Then there's stuff like this, I'm not telling you to get this light, just using it as a comparison. https://www.amazon.ca/SunStream-Dou...Z2V0TmFtZT1zcF9idGY&psc=1&smid=A2ZJA9UUKY06RO
I would bury most of the stem........and either get better light or move it closer........the stretch is extreme.
Your plants are in flower by the way.
We have them in a very dark room with the attached inexpensive grow light we bought off Amazon. Do you have any suggestions on an inexpensive grow light or will the one we have suffice?
If the plant is now in a drinking cup your next move is not the 5 gal pot. You need the roots to spread and take over. Next I use a 1 gallon pot. Then let them grow until they are at least 12 inches but can grow bigger. What is going on is that the root system is spreading out and really starting to draw from your soil. I usually flip before the final transpant. Then I put them in 3 gal in which they can grow to 4 or 5 feet if so inclined.
The way I always transplant is to soak the plant in its little container. When the water runs off say in a half hour then squeeze around the sides and bottom. Prep the container you are putting them into. When you have that then supporting the soil around the plant carefully you turn it over and continuing to squeeze the container let it fall out. Supporting it carefully I then break the roots free of the ball they have grown into so they can spread as quickly as they want to spread. Put them in the new container and fill in around the plant. After give them a good drink and set aside so they can gradually get used to the new container. I have never had any shock this way.