Too Many Plants Plants Per Pot???????

he yea get them out as soon as possible i tried that it absolutly fucked my plants upthey grew gnarly and slow and eventually dies
 

highaltitude

Active Member
not necessarily true....

i often have trouble producing males. however, i found a technique that works everytime, and ensures a male and a female.

plant two seeds in one pot, one will be male, the other female. every time.

don't ask me why, because to this day i am still baffled. but, it DOES work :mrgreen:

kp
Whoooha. No that's some new evidence there!
My three seeds in one pot, all ended up female. It does vary.
 

kkday

Well-Known Member
When I was in HI I would see these 20 foot pine apple trees growing out of what looked like a 30 gallon barrel.
What the fuck are you talking about??? Pineapple trees??? 20 feet?? What are you smoking??? Google "how pineapple grow"



Just leave them in all together. Tie them down to separate them from each other so they don't stretch too much. Maybe consider cutting a couple down if there stretching or crowding each other. Leave the roots and stump there so not to disrupt the other roots. 4 in a 5 gal bucket will be ok, not recomended but make due with what you got. Juice those bitches they will eat up you ferts. Good luck
 

bleachfan

Active Member
Well at this point transplanting would do some damage so what I would do is drill a few holes in the bucket (well I guess quite a few) and stick the whole bucket in the ground. I would also trim a few of the lower branches and plant the thing deep. Roots will eventually arise from that segment and help support these beasts you got going. The trimming of the lower leaves will stimulate some root growth and the plant should (assuming you back fill with light-weight, high draining, moisture retaining mixture) come back strong.
 

dirrtyd

Well-Known Member
Well at this point transplanting would do some damage so what I would do is drill a few holes in the bucket (well I guess quite a few) and stick the whole bucket in the ground. I would also trim a few of the lower branches and plant the thing deep. Roots will eventually arise from that segment and help support these beasts you got going. The trimming of the lower leaves will stimulate some root growth and the plant should (assuming you back fill with light-weight, high draining, moisture retaining mixture) come back strong.
You are responding to an issue that happened in 2007. lmao
 
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