Crazy question.. Grams per top? How many grams does one top (or branch usually yield)?

Discussion in 'Growing Marijuana Indoors' started by lusca24, Jun 9, 2015.

  1. Yea i'dk I put them into flower and the droopiness went away?
    But came to look at them today and plant plant was very droopy and looked like it needed some water
     
  2. Didn't you have a fungus gnat problem?  It appears your plant never recovered from that based on the current pics compared to when you were having the problem, they look the same.  You can definitely over water soil, no matter what pot it's in. 
     
  3. I use air pots and yes you can over water in them if you have a soil that is thick and holds water. IMO your roots don't look all that healthy they are very sparse and stringy. This is how mine always look
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  4. I took that for the web cuz I didn't have a pic but that's what mine look like. (Disclaimer for all the haters)
     
  5. hmm mine probably looks that way because I started from clones so it doesn't have a taproot like seed plants, my plants look amazing now though there huge and suck all the water up in a day so I want used to water so often
     
  6. Uneducated guess - 4grams per top dried. ~240g total. If I'm closest I win your harvest.




     
  7. How my plants looking after about a 1 and a half week since switching to 12 12? I'm finally seeing signs of flower but my plants did not stretch very much as I was expecting? What do you guys think
     

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  8. Am I screwed? I just noticed what I believe is powder mildewith these damn plants have had every problem you can think of.. what do I do? I'm like 2 weeks in flower and I tried using milk but that didn't help... I'm stuck.
     

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  9. I actually did defoliation took like 100 leaves off and lst again. But I think I have mildew and I think I just wasted a few months and bunch of money on equipment because I heard once you had it it's hard to stop getting it on new grows as well
     
  10. #31 TwanG1111, Jul 3, 2015
    Last edited by a moderator: Jul 3, 2015
    The longer you let it go the harder it will be to eradicate, late flowering plants that have this are extremely hard to get rid of, due to bud density thicker in late flowering plants, because of this the mildew attacks the buds which you can't cure mildew once it affects the buds.(also known as Bud Rot)Plants that are stressed from environment factors, or fighting pest's will be taken over more by this mold, due to the fact it's already fighting problems. If you see your stressed plants getting it first, try to isolate the plant and bring down humidity, better air ventilation and or negative air pressure grow room. If you have mildew with your fans running, you will need to take them down and clean them as the fans can spread spores around the room. You will need to wash down everything in your indoor grow room, spores land on everything, so everything needs to be washed with mild hot water and bleach solution. Removing infected leaves from the grow room is critical, carefully removing them and trying to not knock spores into the air is a challenge. Applying a bag over infected leaves and tying it shut then removing it helps out with not knocking up spores in the air. Making sure you use h202 on stems that have open wounds from leaves that was removed. DO NOT water when lights are going to be going out, doing this keeps water on the plants soil and causes higher humidity levels, this goes for foliar feeding. Water plants when lights first come on or there is at least 5 hours left of lights on. You want to reduce the amount of humidity as possible if your levels of RH are high, you want to keep your humidity levels around 40 to 50%, and anything over 60% is going to trigger problems. Also keeping plants spaced apart allowing maximum air flow in between plants will help minimize plant to plant infection. Using a dehumidifier can greatly reduce humidity issues. Using a meter that tells your grow room conditions like temperature, RH and time can help combat your problems, by keeping track before and after you water can tell you how much if any your humidity can rise after changes made to the grow room. Sulphur Burner is another way to prevent and kill powdery mildew by vaporizing spores in the air. (Do not apply sulfur when air temperature is near or over 90F)
    You will need to treat your plants with various organic and chemical controls. This list will work for indoor and outdoor growers in killing and preventing Powdery Mildew. (Note: When using chemical and or organic control methods, do not spray the buds, and for health and safety reasons, stay away from spraying around the buds if all possible.)
    AQ10
    Serenade
    Plant Shield
    Garden Disease Control
    Fungicide containing Lime, Sulphur
    JMS Stylet Oil
    Saf-T-Side Spray Oil
    Sunspray Ultra-Fine Spray Oil
    Neem Oil
    Neem 2
    Kaligreen
    Safer Garden Fungicide
    Concern Copper Soap Fungicide
    Guardian Angel
    Serenade Garden Disease Control OMRI
    Safer 3-in1 Garden Spray OMRI
    Sulfur Vaporizer
    Organocide
    SM-90
    Malatox
    Garden Sulphur
    Sulphur Burner
    Sodium Bicarbonate
    Chi
    Mother Nature's Karanja Oil
    Concern Copper Soap Fungicide
     

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