Misting Plants?

Dookz

Active Member
yes its good, to mist the plant, does rain exist in your area? try and imagine the outside life bro and recreate the best you can, best of luck
 

zack66

Well-Known Member
I only mist when starting out with baby clones to keep the rh up. I wouldn't mist once plants are established.
 

Rob0769

Active Member
Misting with nutrients can fix any slight deficiencies before they happen. I mist my plants with sea weed, sea green from start then add tru blooms to a week before harvest. I drop the sea weed 2-3 weeks in flower.
 

Edgar9

Well-Known Member
The first time I grew I misted during veg and into flower because I didn't know any better. I said, "I'll do it just one more time" a few weeks into flower and guess what? Bud rot. Rookie mistake.

IMO it's a bad habit to get into. I don't even let a spray bottle into my house after that. Bud rot will change the way you do things. It changes your whole thought process throughout the grow.

It's like if you leave your door unlocked and someone steals all your shit. You don't leave your door unlocked anymore.
 

Sir.Ganga

New Member
I use to mist the plants right after lights out. With some distilled mix w/ thrive B1
Misting after lights out is not a good idea, really. Fungus and molds love a cool, dark, damp place to get a hold on things.

I do not mist, too many issues are caused by it but if you feel you have too, then do it when the light first come on, this way you have all day for the girls to dry out.
 

Towley

Member
Thanks didn't think about that I deff do not want mold.... When i give it a go once more I'll do it mist free :)
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
I never mist my plants.

yes its good, to mist the plant, does rain exist in your area? try and imagine the outside life bro and recreate the best you can, best of luck
No this is not true at all. Growing outdoor is completely different that indoor.
Outdoor gets light from the moon and stars, if indoor gets light like that it can start to show male flowers.
Outdoor temps fluctuate wildly and the plants get used to it.
misting buds can get you mold, outdoors gets rain on buds

You do not want to recreate an outdoor environment, you want to make you indoor environment just right.
 

Rob0769

Active Member
The first time I grew I misted during veg and into flower because I didn't know any better. I said, "I'll do it just one more time" a few weeks into flower and guess what? Bud rot. Rookie mistake.

IMO it's a bad habit to get into. I don't even let a spray bottle into my house after that. Bud rot will change the way you do things. It changes your whole thought process throughout the grow.

It's like if you leave your door unlocked and someone steals all your shit. You don't leave your door unlocked anymore.
If you're going to spray you need to make sure you spray with something that has microbes in it that settle on the plant. I use Tru blooms. The microbes can not exist with mold. Kinda like war. Once the microbes establish a base the evil mold can't. If you look at my main picture or my grow journal you will see tons of branches, leaves and colas completely squished together in a 2x2 area and they are like that for over 2 feet high. I misted every 4 days like clock work until day 65 of flowering. Never any mold. Even one time my ac stopped working (I use window ac so the room was colder than the tent therefore condensor stayed off) and it was over 100 in the tent. When I opened it the air that blew on my face was like I was in a room with a hot shower on. Very humid and smelled weird. Didn't even have mold develop that time and it should have. I am convinced it was the Tru Blooms.
 

Rob0769

Active Member
I will never mist without tru blooms unless it is a deficiency. Especially if flowering. Just wanna be clear. :D
 

Edgar9

Well-Known Member
I will never mist without tru blooms unless it is a deficiency. Especially if flowering. Just wanna be clear. :D
So I take it you like true blooms.

You should do a side by side test. One with TB and one without to see if you're wasting your money.
 

Nullis

Moderator
uhh, I guess I don't really like to refer to it as 'misting', that just sounds so... yeah, whatever.

It is mostly a foliar feed\spray with actively aerated compost\guano tea, sometimes micro-nutrients. With a 1 gallon pump-sprayer with interchangeable nozzles, not some pathetic little 'misting' bottle.

You should only do this just around lights on during the second half of flowering (and have good circulation), but with foliar feeding you definitely should see results.
 

unknown1231

Well-Known Member
I will speak from experience.

I have had instances from seed to flower where no mist was applied AND I have had instances where I misted every 2-3 days, heavily, up until 3 weeks into flower. I must say plants grew quicker, looked healthier, and overall were more vigorous with mist/rain than the exact same genetics under no mist/rain conditions. I always misted during the 'day' BUT would use ambient lighting during the 'misting' (hps/mh lights off!) and have a 2-3 hour misting period where you go in there every 20 mins and drench the girls. I used the ambient light to avoid quick evaporation and let the girls rest a bit and drink, I suppose the ambient lighting could also simulate thick clouds on a rainy day. All misting done coincided with either a light or full watering (my own watering method, i.e. light & full watering).

Whoever said to replicate what you see outside... You hit the nail on the head.

Though a plant will grow without being misted this doesn't mean it shouldn't be. All plants have evolved, for hundreds of millions of years, with rain as part of their lives (for the most part) so why deny them what they've evolved to tolerate, accept, love, grow better with?

There are definitely times you do not want to mist. This would be when flowers have grown to the point where water can no longer easily evaporate from between them- doing this will avoid any issues with mold. I would also recommend not misting at night- not because of mold but more so because you'll likely interrupt the light cycle.
 
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