hydra-glide
Well-Known Member
End of 5th wk. of flower (not bloom). Stripped all of the fan leaves from every plant, 7-days ago (at wk. 4). The MMJ caregiver gave me 10-seeds in a cotton-packed glass tube - sativa hybrids he developed. Ethiopian + Mauritius. The thin-leaf light-green plant on the left, SuperSilverHaze x (Mauritius x Ethiopian) will ripen later (70+ days) than the dark green ones on the right, SuperWrecker N-cut x (Maritius x Ethiopian). Both are in their 5th week of flower.
I'm leaving the existing fan leaves on the (left) plant, but anytime an existing fan leaf enlarges on the dark green plants, they get removed. To me, there's only two types of fan leaves: The large spread ones with a thick water-filled stem, easy to reach with snips (they all get removed, 4th week of flower), and the smaller fan leaves directly connected to layers of flower within the bud structure, that you'd have to dig-in to reach the stem and clip it. Those smaller fan leaves develop trich-glands (I leave those). I'm at war with non-trich carrying fan leaves. In the 5th week of flower, trichless fan leaves are free-loading bums, and nurture-greedy like every organism on earth. They shade buds and try their best to stifle their growth in a cage-grow.
Having the center of the plants open to sunlight allows the innermost buds the opp. to develop into hard bodies. So, far I believe that cage-growing in a 6x8x8 greenhouse is a viable method, coupled with manifolding and super cropping. But, will the dark green plants buds grow to fill-in the space left by the removed water leaf, with 4-5 wks left to flower? I'll stop using Epsom Salts (1 tsp/gal) now at the end of the 5th week of flower, as new trich glands produced won't have time to develop by harvest. I'll be able to tell if this is so, from the ice-water bubble I make from the trimmings. Less leaves to deal with at harvest is OK with me. Cut 'em early A.M and hang them in a grow tent with indirect clip-fan air venting. Done.
I've had no aphids or grasshopper problems using TetraSan/Cease/Spinosad before 2nd week of flower, and then 4th wk of flower Kontos as a systemic drench, and weekly alternate spraying of Cease/Spinosad/ or Milstop/BT. No time wasted on Aphid misery.
Note: When you cut those first big-stemmed water leaves, do so at their stem/branch junction. If you leave an 1/8" stub, flowers will not fill in completely.
I'm leaving the existing fan leaves on the (left) plant, but anytime an existing fan leaf enlarges on the dark green plants, they get removed. To me, there's only two types of fan leaves: The large spread ones with a thick water-filled stem, easy to reach with snips (they all get removed, 4th week of flower), and the smaller fan leaves directly connected to layers of flower within the bud structure, that you'd have to dig-in to reach the stem and clip it. Those smaller fan leaves develop trich-glands (I leave those). I'm at war with non-trich carrying fan leaves. In the 5th week of flower, trichless fan leaves are free-loading bums, and nurture-greedy like every organism on earth. They shade buds and try their best to stifle their growth in a cage-grow.
Having the center of the plants open to sunlight allows the innermost buds the opp. to develop into hard bodies. So, far I believe that cage-growing in a 6x8x8 greenhouse is a viable method, coupled with manifolding and super cropping. But, will the dark green plants buds grow to fill-in the space left by the removed water leaf, with 4-5 wks left to flower? I'll stop using Epsom Salts (1 tsp/gal) now at the end of the 5th week of flower, as new trich glands produced won't have time to develop by harvest. I'll be able to tell if this is so, from the ice-water bubble I make from the trimmings. Less leaves to deal with at harvest is OK with me. Cut 'em early A.M and hang them in a grow tent with indirect clip-fan air venting. Done.
I've had no aphids or grasshopper problems using TetraSan/Cease/Spinosad before 2nd week of flower, and then 4th wk of flower Kontos as a systemic drench, and weekly alternate spraying of Cease/Spinosad/ or Milstop/BT. No time wasted on Aphid misery.
Note: When you cut those first big-stemmed water leaves, do so at their stem/branch junction. If you leave an 1/8" stub, flowers will not fill in completely.
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