How to prevent trnasplant shock

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
But OP.... in all seriousness..I've never had transplant shock. Keep the same environment, and don't get crazy with the feed, water, lights. Go light on everything until they adjust. Feed in small circles on your transplant.... wait. and then gradually increase your circle of feed/water till they get roots to the edge of your new pot. Then you can fully saturate the medium to a wet/dry cycle. You can't over feed/water at one time. IF your plants are in thier final pot, and the roots are fully reached to the edge of the pot, you can literally flood the plant at one time... as long as you have good drainage (in soil).... it'll be fine. Wait for a dry cycle, and repeat.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
I forget you are on a much bigger scale lol I was sitting here like 100 gallons of feed.. 20gal of runoff :shock: lol time to ash this doobie out :lol:
Yeah, my nute bill is about $1200 a run ... trying to run as lean as possible with the GH trio.. Market sucks. Im finding out that I dont really need to run Rasta CalMag at $59 a gallon. Cutting that out. The Bloom has plenty of MG, and my well water is rich in Ca... so... it's all a learning curve.
 

blueberrymilkshake

Well-Known Member
I tried cloning my first run, did a dozen or so. Only kept one. I think about 80% lived. No mykos. Used a little IBA. I think the key was coco plugs. They seemed pretty fool proof.

My profile pic is a guy from a cartoon called mission hill. Character was voiced by Brian Posehn.

My milkshakes do indeed bring all the boys to the yard. They will not leave. Tell them to leave.
 

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