Schwaggy P's Random Stuff

Schwaggy P

Well-Known Member
Few more Skunky Brewster phenos. After seeing how much frost these put on, I'm very excited to see what comes from the Chemdogs x Skunky Brewster.
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Here is the Granny Skunk that is expressing the structure and narrow leaves I was hoping to find. The male I chose for the Green Crack S1 pollination has this same expression.
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Jesselikes2grow

Well-Known Member
You’re welcome, :lol:

Thanks, this is the first run from seed for the specific pheno of Chemdog x C99 in the picture, and she’s still on the hanger drying. Another pheno that’s been cured and smoked has a nice energetic rush that you feel starting in your chest before spreading.

I have a harder time deciding on seeds to pop than what to smoke. I have about 30 different flower types to choose from on hand, so choosing what to smoke can take awhile sometimes. Usually, the time of day will limit the selection to avoid unscheduled naps or sleepless nights. I try to keep rotating through them evenly, but sometimes I’ll get a crush on something and smoke it heavier. It’s hard to pick a favorite, but I usually end my night with Chocolate Mint OG. It just has a way of tapping into a dimmer switch on relaxation and sleepiness, slowly lowering you into a great sleep.

I do spend tons of time trimming. I’ve tried to come up with different grades of trimming and naming specific techniques to pass the time.

I keep plants that will never flower in soil and run the rest through flower in hydro. It is easier for me to keep copies from outgrowing the veg space when they are in soil. Plus, I’d hate to lose my whole library to pump failures or other malfunctions in hydro. I take cuts from my soil moms and veg them on a flood table in 3” net pots. Depending on the strain, they only need about 1-2weeks before hitting a flower table.
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I only grow indoor. Good luck on your outdoor plants. Has the P91 cross purpled up more?
That's just friggin awesomeness you've got going there. Love it, love the details you provide.
 

myke

Well-Known Member
Awesome job. I’ve enjoyed reading this when I can. I think because it’s so picture heavy it freezes up my shitty smart tv.
Question if you don’t mind. I see your in pots with clay pebbles. I also run this way. I top feed 24/7 into a tray my roots are starting to come out the bottom. There shaded by plants. Do you remove them or just let them be?
Thanks.
 

Schwaggy P

Well-Known Member
Awesome job. I’ve enjoyed reading this when I can. I think because it’s so picture heavy it freezes up my shitty smart tv.
Question if you don’t mind. I see your in pots with clay pebbles. I also run this way. I top feed 24/7 into a tray my roots are starting to come out the bottom. There shaded by plants. Do you remove them or just let them be?
Thanks.
Thank you, sorry about the freezing. I flood the tables and have the roots grow out of the pot also. I noticed that the plants that have their roots break out of the pot and spread around the tray, can give bigger yields and better swelling. When I flip a fresh table of plants in flower, I like to keep the flood intervals frequent, so that the root zone stays hydrated enough to chase the water out of the pots and not air prune. This consistently moist environment is what you are providing with a constant drip, so the roots never dry out to the point of pruning back.
Roots.jpg
By the time I am spreading out the flooding times, the plants have stretched and shade out the table and roots. This keeps the green algae at bay. As long as you are seeing healthy roots spreading around, I would keep them going (think bigger roots, bigger fruits).
I have on occasion cut back roots, but only in veg, in an attempt to "bush out" the root mass. It's essentially the air pruning technique of soil, applied to a constantly flooding hydro table.
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