good2bkind
Well-Known Member
This single plant grow is using "Super Bud" from High-Grade Seeds. $50 for 10 seeds and they shipped me 12 in a plain brown paper envelope. The seeds were in small sipping-straw-like containers, stoppered with cotton, with small hand-written labels and a smiley face.
I started growing this plant back in August, it was one of three. They were all tiny and I started them in Solo cups. I had them under flourescent lights, but I was using the wrong lights-- 5500 instead of 6500k, and they sprouted, but never really grew.
My last grow (Quasi Ghetto Grow) was using the same seeds, yielded one plant with some decent bud. That grow was done totally indoors with a few flourescent lights and was probably moderately successful because there was only one plant so it got most of the light.
This current grow has come a long way from the sad state that it started in and will yield more bud than my last grow, even though this plant went through some seriously tough times.
I put the three tiny plants outside, each in one gallon containers, in a stealthy place where they could receive sunlight. This was somewhere around September I think, and I figured they would go into flower pretty quickly, which they did. Two were males and the one in the pics below was female.
The soil I used is Expert Gardener organic mix all-purpose potting soil, which includes three months-worth of natural nutes.
I learned from my last attempt at leaving plants outside that they must be above the ground, to avoid earwigs. However, since I transplanted and had them outside in September, here on the west coast there are no bugs to speak of, at that time. The plants I do have outside, I have learned to let spiders build webs on, and live in them, because spiders eat bugs. That's organic.
This picture is after I've transplanted her and left her in the sun for probably a couple weeks. I wasn't home during the day and didn't realize at first that she was mostly in shade, after which I figured out a way to get her sunlight most of the day (more on that in the next post).
In the picture below you can see that her leaves aren't even formed properly, with only three blades to the fan at this point.
I started growing this plant back in August, it was one of three. They were all tiny and I started them in Solo cups. I had them under flourescent lights, but I was using the wrong lights-- 5500 instead of 6500k, and they sprouted, but never really grew.
My last grow (Quasi Ghetto Grow) was using the same seeds, yielded one plant with some decent bud. That grow was done totally indoors with a few flourescent lights and was probably moderately successful because there was only one plant so it got most of the light.
This current grow has come a long way from the sad state that it started in and will yield more bud than my last grow, even though this plant went through some seriously tough times.
I put the three tiny plants outside, each in one gallon containers, in a stealthy place where they could receive sunlight. This was somewhere around September I think, and I figured they would go into flower pretty quickly, which they did. Two were males and the one in the pics below was female.
The soil I used is Expert Gardener organic mix all-purpose potting soil, which includes three months-worth of natural nutes.
I learned from my last attempt at leaving plants outside that they must be above the ground, to avoid earwigs. However, since I transplanted and had them outside in September, here on the west coast there are no bugs to speak of, at that time. The plants I do have outside, I have learned to let spiders build webs on, and live in them, because spiders eat bugs. That's organic.
This picture is after I've transplanted her and left her in the sun for probably a couple weeks. I wasn't home during the day and didn't realize at first that she was mostly in shade, after which I figured out a way to get her sunlight most of the day (more on that in the next post).
In the picture below you can see that her leaves aren't even formed properly, with only three blades to the fan at this point.
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