Cloudz2600
Well-Known Member
More than a year later and no links, seems legit lol. Thanks for bumping this thread universe, gonna have to go with UB on this one.
More than a year later and no links, seems legit lol. Thanks for bumping this thread universe, gonna have to go with UB on this one.
Hey, wonder if I can give some advice. Temps and your relative humidity have a large roll to play in the whole "botrytis" factor. BUT you may be having issues with air circulation. Do you currently have fans running? I mean blowing into your plants that is. If you haven't got oscillation fans to circulate the air and to blow cool air onto your plants, you WILL suffer bot rot issues. Your temps seem to be perfect, but you may need to check your humidity or check the air circulation. anything over 80 and you might have issues. But with your temps, I don't see why this has happened in the first placeI have very little fluctuation with my temps..75-77 lights on..70-72 lights off. My plants thrive. Grows that Ive had before with lower dark period temps had bud rot issues, especially bushy indicas..so I like to keep it low 70s.
High night time temps eat up carbos that were manufactured during the day to the process of respiration versus cellulose production. That's the science.
Me? I'd rather get fat dense colas knowing that I had given my plants a 20F drop in day to night time temps. All fruit bearing plants produce superior quality fruit with a large swing in day to night temps, especially wine grapes. I'll take a Cab that ripens with 55F temps during late ripening over one that has high night temps of say 72F.
Experiment, that's the only way you learn.
Maybe we could do something about that.
Even though this document is on chrysanthemum's. The information that is contained inside relates to other plants. I've been searching the web for an document to post up and the best I can find is here http://aob.oxfordjournals.org/content/90/1/111.full.pdf
It all has to do with internode and stem length. also has if I remember correctly from my studies, anything drastic change within 10-15F WILL show symptoms of mild shock its system. same goes for the root system when you shock it from either warm or cold water.
Going back to what Uncle Ben had said. I would strongly disagree.
Plants don't do so well when the root system is cold. Matter of fact anything under 50-60 and the root systems metabolic uptake starts to cease up. When I say stay within 10-15F from your day/night, Even human's burn their own bodily nutrients to get the temperature to the level we need it at. Example: its 950F out and your you drink a cup of ice cold water, your body will now burn calories to get that ice water to the temperature your body is set at. So that being said, if your day is 75F and your night is 55F your plants priorities will be set to adjusting temperatures so it can run it's photosynthetic process and NOT on "growing" or "flowering" like you want them too.
If anyone has any questioned on this. just google "biochemical processes's of plants" and look into plants mechanisms for heat and cold tolerance and read about a plants metabolism when related to hot/cold.
Hope We Helped
For starts, I wasn't referring to temps in the root zone. Yes, very cold temps at the root zone will impede normal processes.dammit... i dont know who to listen to. Uncle Ben said a 20F drop is good and high night temps eat up carbos. but you say it will shock the plant. guess i gotta go research myself. hopefully marijuana plants is just like any other plants when dealing with temps.
http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/ornamental/a-reference-guide-to-plant-care-handling-and-merchandising/light-temperature-and-humidity/Temperature
Most plants tolerate normal temperature fluctuations. In general, foliage plants grow best between 70 degrees and 80 degrees F. during the day and between 60 degrees to 68 degrees F. at night. Most flowering plants prefer the same daytime temperature range, but grow best when nighttime temperatures range from 55 degrees to 60 degrees F. Lower nighttime temperatures help the plant: recover from moisture loss, intensify flower color and prolong flower life. Excessively low or high temperatures may cause: plant stress, inhibit growth, or promote a spindly appearance and foliage damage or drop. Cool nighttime temperatures are actually more desirable for plant growth than high temperatures. A good rule of thumb is to keep nighttime temperatures 10 to 15 degrees lower than daytime temperatures.
my lights are off during the day. and it gets around 78-82F. and when the lights are on during the night, its around the same temp. it should be a good thing to turn on the lights at night since its colder. but what should i do when the lights are off? winter is coming soon but daytime temps are still pretty high in california. is a portable giant AC ok to put in the grow room? i think the AC dehumidifies by sucking the moist from the air and make cold air from it. but it also vents out hot air from the back. i tried once to let the carbon exhaust suck the vented hot air, but it weakens the passive intake since it is using most of its energy sucking the hot air.My best friend recently went through this issue. He was running his lights at night and turning them off during the day. Everytime I would go visit them I would tell him, something isnt right man. I didnt know at the time that he wasnt turning his ac on during the day to cool it down. When I finally asked the right question (weeks later) it was of course too late for that batch. He fixed the issue after and the difference in the batch he has going currently and that last batch is 100% night and day difference.
You better believe a drop in night temps is important.
83-85 in the daytime? is this for flowering as well? shouldnt flowering be around 75-80?lol. i have run sealded rooms for years now my temps are 83-85 day and no lower than 76 at night. i have huge colas. i have found out that my very stretchy ecsd plant will form nice big complete colas at these temps. But in my non sealed room the (76 day, 67 night) the same strain has more stretchy colas. the following pic is from sealed room. View attachment 2379640View attachment 2379641
i think its your overall temps being higher not just your night time temps what was your summer room humidity at?All I know is in the summer time when my lights out temp is higher I get less bud and less dense buds. Now that the fall is here and my lights out temps are 10-15 deg coolers my buds are much better. I don't give a shit what anyone says I grow the same plants(clones) and get better results with cooler lights out temps.
i would really like to see you do an indoor grow with 40 degree swings i know thats not what u said BUT the point is this is for indoor not everything that happens outdoor appliesHigh P foods induce stretch, if that's your worry. I just deal with what I'm handed and work with common sense botanical practices. An Afghan mountainous grown indica probably gets a 40F swing in temps. A sativa in Michoacan about 15F. Grapes in NAPA get a 40F temp swing up to and come harvest time.