Would anyone know what this is from?

Jrmtr808

Well-Known Member
I transplanted this little one into a 5 gallon fabric pot 3 days ago on Monday. I gave her some mychroizae and molasses yesterday when i watered her. I noticed today that the cotyledons are dead but i also noticed one of the single blade leaves on the first node is also wilting and looks weird. Does anyone know what this is from? Is it a start of a deficiency? Lmk. Please and thank you!ED3D45A3-2A23-4E57-BA54-99D42C77B6B4.jpeg
 

Jrmtr808

Well-Known Member
Looks healthy, hold steady to your plan or don’t change/add/increase too much and carry on, monitor for a few days. Those leaves do get abandoned relatively early as the plant moves happily upward and onward. If those are the only “bad” thing happening, she’s happy.
Thats good to hear! I honestly only been giving this plant a mixture of rice water, molasses, and Roots Organic Bio-Force when i water. I got Roots Organic Terp Tea Grow waiting on the side for when i decide to feed it. Im gonna follow Roots Organics feeding schedule, and it says to start feeding the Terp Tea Grow at Week 2 of Veg. Is this plant still considered a seedling? or would it be considered in its Veg stage now? Its 18 days old since sprouting through the soil and grown outdoors.

Your knowledge would be helpful.
Thank you.
 

Babalonian

Well-Known Member
I don’t know how helpful I am, but I’m glad to help if I can, you’re welcome

I remember reading around week 3 from seed, or 3-5 nodes is when you can begin vegging. I think you’re close/there if you want to call it day1, probably still at least 2 weeks/nodes before you want to start considering any kind of training/manifolding though.

good luck
 
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Jrmtr808

Well-Known Member
I don’t know how helpful I am, but I’m glad to help if I can, you’re welcome

I remember reading around week 3 from seedI got or 3-5 nodes is when you can begin vegging. I think you’re close/there if you want to call it day1, probably still at least 2 weeks/nodes before you want to start considering any kind of training/manifolding though.

good luck
Right on! Would you happen to know how long it’ll take until the plant starts growing side shoots? Probably another 2 weeks?
 

McShnutz

Well-Known Member
Right on! Would you happen to know how long it’ll take until the plant starts growing side shoots? Probably another 2 weeks?
If you want to encourage auxiliary branching you can employ LST or HST techniques. Otherwise the plant will grow in the classic "Xmas tree shape". Remember that branches and foliage are a reflection of the root structure. Keep the roots happy and growing, and you'll have a frigging bush in no time. Some plants are just slower than others at getting established. Genetics play a large role in this, but nutrient, enviroment and lighting does too. With cannabis its all about finding that "happy medium".
 

Babalonian

Well-Known Member
If you want to encourage auxiliary branching you can employ LST or HST techniques. Otherwise the plant will grow in the classic "Xmas tree shape". Remember that branches and foliage are a reflection of the root structure. Keep the roots happy and growing, and you'll have a frigging bush in no time. Some plants are just slower than others at getting established. Genetics play a large role in this, but nutrient, enviroment and lighting does too. With cannabis its all about finding that "happy medium".
Yup, if you want to induce branching from the classic Christmas tree, you’re going to need to train/“hurt” her a little, but not too soon (or too late). Everyone should grow one plant/giant-cola/donkey style that you don’t top/fim, learning and all, but (genetics/environment pending) if you have a strict height/ceiling restriction then don’t wait to top/train until you’re starting to get close to that limit.

Here’s a good read, the mainlining and manifolding techniques as they call it. Don’t recommend following it like a recipe for your first time, more to read the entire thing for understanding. Understanding training will change the way you structurally view your plants. https://www.growweedeasy.com/manifold#environment
 

Jrmtr808

Well-Known Member
Yup, if you want to induce branching from the classic Christmas tree, you’re going to need to train/“hurt” her a little, but not too soon (or too late). Everyone should grow one plant/giant-cola/donkey style that you don’t top/fim, learning and all, but (genetics/environment pending) if you have a strict height/ceiling restriction then don’t wait to top/train until you’re starting to get close to that limit.

Here’s a good read, the mainlining and manifolding techniques as they call it. Don’t recommend following it like a recipe for your first time, more to read the entire thing for understanding. Understanding training will change the way you structurally view your plants. https://www.growweedeasy.com/manifold#environment
Thanks buddy! ill wait like you said 2 more weeks/nodes and ill start applying these techniques.

Thank you for your help! I appreciate it!
 

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
I always cut those single blade leaves off...side branches always grow in their place
It would benefit more imo if those wounds were covered in soil to grow another set of thick roots.
It's either 2 more branches that could possible become tops if trained right, or more thick roots.
 
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