Thanks man...how's the honey clone doing? Funny that you are growing a clone from a sister clone to this clone :) I actually sent her the link to this thread so she may be on to us if we just avoid the topic. And I do t know if the neighbours know about the plant or not. The good thing is that...
So back at the start of June I gave my neighbour an extra clone that I had. He grew a couple little plants last summer and was excited to try again.
I've been watching his plant gradually overtake mine in size since he put his into the ground while mine is in a container. It's now almost 6'...
...dahlias, sunflowers, amaranth, carpet flowers, cypress vine, clematis, Scarlett runner bean, cobaea, CANNABIS, marigold, morning glory, honeysuckle, impatiens, rudbeckia...
...and those are just the ones I can see in my backyard right now.
If there's any really nasty weather forecast and you are concerned, I'd say pull em. They are all going to give you decent smoke at this point and decent is better than nada. They look good though.
The daylight hours are different every day except for the spring and fall equinox. On that day, the sun is shining directly on the equator and not more towards either hemisphere so when the line of darkness travels around the earth, it does so in a vertical north-south line on the same plane as...
I have no idea what that diagram or your post is trying to say. Not sure what horizons have to do with anything. The equinox means that on that day everywhere on earth has equal night and day whether you are at the equator, the poles, or in Boston.
Otherwise it would probably be called the...
Well if you are not lying, then you are confused because your stories are inconsistent. You already have stated that the plant is 2 years old and has been outside it's whole life. Then you said
"well on winter time i took it to my balcony which is nearly the same temperature as the outside is"...
It's going to like being outside a lot better than inside under that little light.
But I'm confused... if the plant has been outside for its whole life and is two years old, how did it already survive two winters?
I'm no expert, but it looks healthy enough. Those leaves look really dark green which could indicate a potential excess of N. The curling could be related to that but without checking one of those nutrient toxicity/deficiency charts, I can't remember to be sure.
Overall though, any issues...
A healthy plant shouldn't have a lot of yellowing leaves and you have a LOT. It looks like you're not giving it much N from the list of stuff your feeding it.
I find it strange that people say things like "You don't need those leaves" when the leaves are the connection between your plant and...