Jack Larson
Active Member
I tried it on "The Purps" + it worked = FACT! A "claim" to you , a fact to me , at this point I think it's more about you taking on Brick than weather or not the method works . "WHY?"
I am glad to hear that you had a strain it worked and worked well on.I tried it on "The Purps" + it worked = FACT! A "claim" to you , a fact to me , at this point I think it's more about you taking on Brick than weather or not the method works . "WHY?"
I still do it with The Purps but I havent seen a differance in any other strains, Cheese is the only one I haven't tried it on yet.Last time I did it with Purps I saw a little White Powdery Milldew, next time I will increase air circulation.I flush, so soil was very wet.I haven't kept score lately. Who is actualy doing and has it worked effectively?
I know that you are very against this method HB but have you ever seen anything to make you believe that a couple days of darkness would be detrimental to your plants in any way?Personally, I would really like someone to find this 'study' because I'm hoping they explain why this method only worked on some strains. Did they say it was more likely to work on sativa dominant strains or indica dominant strains or strains that were from a certain region? How many strains did they actually test? If there isn't some sort of parallel that can be drawn at the end of the study explaining why it worked on certain strains and didn't on others, then that 'study' was really a waste of money (which is probably the reason why they're charging for the results).
I'm subscribed to this thread in hopes this paper pops up somewhere....
Assuming you're not missing the 'harvest window' and you're not subjecting your plants to a situation where mold may take over, this so called method wont hurt plants. But just like the nail-through-the-stalk, feeding plants sugar and other such fallacies I've come across, I've tried to make a habit of only doing things that improve yield and quality. I'd recommend everyone try it, but are you growers out there skilled enough to be consistent in your daily, larger scale perpetual harvests to tell a difference between the dark cycle plant and every other one you take down? Lack of consistency is the reason why so many growers out there are using rip-off products because they attribute one decent harvest to the $100/litre bottle of junk they were sold.I know that you are very against this method HB but have you ever seen anything to make you believe that a couple days of darkness would be detrimental to your plants in any way?
I agree with you that most growers aren't astute enough to be able to determine on their own whether the 72 hours of dark makes a difference in potency, but it does seem to reduce chlorophyll levels somewhat. That, in and of itself is reason enough for me.Assuming you're not missing the 'harvest window' and you're not subjecting your plants to a situation where mold may take over, this so called method wont hurt plants. But just like the nail-through-the-stalk, feeding plants sugar and other such fallacies I've come across, I've tried to make a habit of only doing things that improve yield and quality. I'd recommend everyone try it, but are you growers out there skilled enough to be consistent in your daily, larger scale perpetual harvests to tell a difference between the dark cycle plant and every other one you take down? Lack of consistency is the reason why so many growers out there are using rip-off products because they attribute one decent harvest to the $100/litre bottle of junk they were sold.