I never "run them up" such that it's a problem regarding stress to the plant. You should give your plants whatever they need to retain their leaves in a healthy and green condition until harvest.So do you just run your nutes down to the end?
As I've said for years, if someone can directly link palate quality with flushing, the chemical/botanical cause and effect, I'm all ears.Uncle ben, so glad you decided to reply to this... i knew you'd say something like this. I was wondering have you done side by side flushed and not flushed smoke tests?
If so thanks for clearing this up, they always say that flushing prevents the tree from charring black instead of beat white (and something to do with harshness). I have seen this in my early attempts to grow dry and cure and was wondering what other factors are involved in this (always rushing to smoke it). My ladies come out nice and healthy green. How would it have anything to do with the growing/flowering process? Am i not drying enough? or curing long enough? How long and in what conditions do you dry and cure? please redirect if you have already written about this.
on another note... whats ur opinion of re-vegging? have you tried it?
Uncle Ben, couldn´t agree more."Flushing" is a myth. Flushing products are there to make money for those selling their snake oils.
As I've said for years, if someone can directly link palate quality with flushing, the chemical/botanical cause and effect, I'm all ears.
I don't get taken in by the mystique, romance, and hype of forum/magazine "curing" methods. I think the palate and feel taste and quality can be directly linked to the amount and make up of the tars and terpenes found in the cannabis organic matter. The Dutch started this nonsense as an "atonement" for burning their plants with too much plant foods from the get-go.
I just harvested the last of my outdoor plant (paltry at that thanks to hungry grasshoppers). The leaves are nice and green, very moist and cool to the touch, and it's drying rather fast in a wine cellar with an ultra low RH (I use an A/C for cooling). I'll post pix soon, most likely in my sticky thread. Once the smaller stems start snapping rather than bending, the buds go into a baggie for moisture equilibrium.
UB
Hang 'em high.Uncle ben... when you say they go into baggies? i am very interested in your drying and curing techniques
Again, "flushing" is just another cannabis myth, now a paradigm. It's one of those "if the lie is repeated enough, it becomes the truth", and most cannabis forum members will about fall for any gimmick that someone comes up with.....it's just what they do.you have to flush be serious now the reason they dontfor tomatoes is cause there feeding them a nute that is 0-50-30is will justremove some salts and allow for better burning and a little better smoke
I like you Uncle Ben ;O))Again, "flushing" is just another cannabis myth, now a paradigm. It's one of those "if the lie is repeated enough, it becomes the truth", and most cannabis forum members will about fall for any gimmick that someone comes up with.....it's just what they do.
Just because something is popular does not mean it carries any merit, especially when it comes to cannabis grow forums.
Mexican pot growers don't flush, Kentucky or Virginian tobacco growers don't flush, etc.
Your challenge people is to find out what the active ingredient is in one of the snake oils, say.....Clearex, and explain the cause and effect that it has on the plant which supposedly improves one's palate and lung experience. Sorry, but anecdotal evidence, another "feel-good" explanation doesn't cut it.
Thanks,
UB
i have to disagree to the myth about flushing i can totally tell the difference when i dont flush.."Flushing" is a myth. Flushing products are there to make money for those selling their snake oils.
Have fun,
UB