I use a large butcher knife and insert it straight down through the root mass on plants. Even in grow bags. Roots divide just like the plant above ground does when topped.I keep bonsai mothers. In 0.5 litre pots. For months. I just take them out of the pot and prune the roots and then plant into the same pot. Monthly or bi-monthly.
When i want to grow one, i just tranplant into a 5 gallon and watch it explode with growth and before the flip take some clones to keep as new bonsai mothers.
I got 18 potential trees living in .5 litre pots in a 60x40cm area. Great space saver.
Yes it does. When the tip is cut the roots branch out and this creates a better root system. But not in the flowering phase of cannabis.I use a large butcher knife and insert it straight down through the root mass on plants. Even in grow bags. Roots divide just like the plant above ground does when topped.
know of anyone that keeps mothers in airpots, the one liters?
No but it’d be perfectly fine imo. I went as small as 0.25 litre pots with air pathways to prune the roots. Not airpots per se but pretty similar and they worked fine. But they need to be transplanted with fresh soil monthly in such small pots so 0.5 works better.know of anyone that keeps mothers in airpots, the one liters?
Photosynthesis plus, hydroguard, and Recharge (once a month) in Royal Gold TupurMy rootball never looks like that even from seed with a taproot you using mammoth p or something?
It’s like coco but has aged forest compost mixed in too. It’s a very fiberous mix that drains extremely well. I multifeed during Flower so drainage is keyOnly one I’ve heard of is recharge and I deff plan on getting some is tupur coco I’m looking for something different than my typical fox farm
Is there a reason/advantage to using a knife like that and removing a lot of roots as opposed to just breaking it up? With house/garden plants I will just rip it apart with my fingers. This looks much neater and like you are removing more roots. Would splitting the rootball with my thumbs be a bad idea when upcanning a rootbound plant?
No there is no need to use a scalpel or knife to cut the roots. You can use your hand but the reason i use a scalpel is that it provides uniform cuts. When the root tip is taken off the auxilary root tips emerge from the sides. By using a sclapel i’m being sure that i cut as many roots tips as possible to get a better root system in the end. Thats the only reason i do it.Is there a reason/advantage to using a knife like that and removing a lot of roots as opposed to just breaking it up? With house/garden plants I will just rip it apart with my fingers. This looks much neater and like you are removing more roots. Would splitting the rootball with my thumbs be a bad idea when upcanning a rootbound plant?