I said 6 months so you have a chance to go through a couple times. Treating roots, you mean with myco? Yea. Copper too. I'm actually considering changing to the smart pots as they work really well. All these things help to a degree but they are not miracle workers. You will never push the plant past its genetic boundaries. Period.
Indoors, I'm begging you to stop calculating your yield per plant
. That an outdoor mindset. Indoors its about canopy and wattage. You can create a good canopy with 1 plant or 12 in the same space. Just a matter of veg time. Figure your yield as a % of your lighting. Pro growers reach for 1 gram per watt. The HUGE majority get much closer to 1/2 gram per watt.
My roots at day 7 in rockwool. I'm going to try suretogrow.
You didn't use the Mycorrhiza from the grow store I hope. Any Mycorrhiza that doesn't clog up hydro grow & drain lines is not the kind of Mycorrhiza that I'm talking about. I looked at the stuff at grow stores, overpriced junk if you ask me.
Copper is one of the minor nutes, I don't know what it would do for roots. But on my next grow I'm getting some soil with no organic nutes so I can use Dyna-Gro. It's the only fertilizer that I've found that has all the minor nutes, so my next grow should be better. The Tiger Bloom that I'll be feeding with when they're ready is missing 4 of the minor nutes. Calcium, Molybdenum, Sulpher, and Magnesium if I remember right, so I guess it has the copper too. I'd have to double check to be sure.
I agree about genetic boundaries, I've done some research into making super plants, aka gold plants. That's why I laugh when people start talking about strains with 37% THC, it's just not possible unless you change the plant at it's molecular level. But root treatments, UVB, leaf pinching, LST, etc... are all growing techniques used to enhance the growth. Take UVB for example, an MJ strain can't contain more than 20% THC if grown normally, but if you treat with UVB you can grow a plant with over 20% if you're growing a strain that started at 20%.
I'm estimating the yeild per plant because all my plants will be grown under the same conditions. And those conditions will improve as I upgrade my set up. So it makes sense for me to estimate an average yeild per plant. And if I can get 1/2 to 3/4 of a lb per plant under these less than ideal conditions, which I think I will, then getting 3/4 of a lb. on the average from each plant as conditions improve should be no sweat. I could be wrong, but based on the growth so far, I don't think I am. At week 3 when I treated the roots for the first time, my biggest plant was only 8" because of all the problems. The growth has doubled since.
Nice roots, do you treat with Mycorrhiza during the rooting? I think the roots I'm getting out of the Rapid Rooter are more because of the Mycorrhiza than the plugs that they're in. And personally I'd rather use small plugs. I got a few clones in the bigger cubes and I had to tie the trunk down to the edges of the planter with twisty tie type stuff because they're soo loose. As the plant grows the big plugs start to come apart like wet cardboard or something. I'd rather not have plugs at all to be honest, but until I can figure out how to get those kind of roots in a week or less in soil, I guess I'm stuck with plugs.