We're chugging along. I'm gonna replace the body of the tub tomorrow with a new one. A fresh res change and new tub should make the photos nicer. If you're wondering what that ugly thing is in the background, it's a piece of acrylic I siliconed onto the tub as a suction cup probe station positioned for an earlier grow (those suction cups don't like the naked surface of the storage tote -- not slick enough to stick). Anyway, it's all corroded now and just a relic of a past grow, serving no purpose other than making your eyes hurt. So that's why I'm swapping tubs.
Plant 1 day 6
Plant 1 day 8
This exposure is brighter than the one above, it's not really yellowing more...at least I don't think.
Plant 2 day 6
Plant 2 day 8
Like I said, struggling along. This is when they show the last traces of purple on the old leaves as the pre-flower state they came in shuts down and vegging begins. This last minute purpling of some of the older leaves while the plants 'reset' into vegetation is a tell-tale sign of a real OGK. Good sign.
recap of week one. Not a whole lot, but this is to be expected with OGK when reverting back to a vegetative state. They're dying for a water change, but I want to let the silicon work on the replacement tub cure a little longer just to be safe.
Day 1:
Day 8:
The new growth is starting to green up as the roots multiply resulting in more N uptake.
The clones were pretty green when Cheezy brought 'em in as you can see in photo one. But what we have to remember is that the green in those leaves was created by the roots of the mother plant it came from, not the new roots of the cut branch. So while the new roots establish in order to begin creating its own green growth, there is a little yellowing. Note photo two. You can see how they yellowed a bit over the week, but the new growth is starting to green at the top. I call this 'the little yellow footprint' of re-rooting.
I've logged many hours observing marijuana plant growth, particularly OGK... Can you tell?
edit:
Cheeze warned me that these were monster stretcher plants. They're already starting to exhibit vine-like growth, just like the Platinum OG (the strain that got away from me in height as shown in my Diablo journal). I'm a little scared, but I have the cage up. I'm ready for you this time, you tall bitches... I hope.
edit 2:
I intend to employ a scrog training technique that is just as extreme as the rest of my setup. I can't believe I have all those convenient anchor points now. And I have my grid set a bit lower than most I've seen. The reason I can get away with things like this is my intense vigor. Plants can take a lot more punishment in my system than some others, I think. That's why it's kind of dangerous for me to give advice sometimes because I forget that not everyone has virtually shock-proof plants... I've cut, snapped, squashed... just about any abuse you can think of, I've done it to a plant. Once I even cut out a huge chunk of root mass to disentangle a male that got in by accident on an earlier four site tub I was running. I took a pair of scissors and removed huge fistfuls of root from the healthy females to get that bastitch out. The roots just grew back and I've never once seen a herm in all my box growing adventures. Now I would never, ever advise anyone to removes fistfuls of root from their healthy female plants to extract a male. Another reason I'm a clone only grower.
I can hardly wait to start training. Scrog, scrog, scrog. I've been waiting for this moment for quite some time.