A shot of bloom nutes at transplant then a hard water feed to green em up some…
Loving those Jurassic park leaves!
Man that looks great! Cheers
Those are really interesting leaves…thiiiic
Looking good Tony
Always learn something new in your threads …I’ll sit in the back here
Ummm (holds up pizza…swallows) not me.
Looking Good
New to the thread, but wow they really did fill out quite a lot in the last week or so! Looks like you have your hands full
healthy and flourished great grow @Tonygreen props
So you mixed bloom nutes at transplant?? Very interesting. Looks like they exploded when you did that, why is that?
Also, what’s a hard water feeding?
Potassium and calcium drive root growth.
Hit them then a few days later watered with 7 ph water.
The swing up in ph let’s em green up.
Some coco guys will do similar, let the ph drift up a bit between waterings to aid uptake.
What he said ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I do a gradient in soil cause uh, if you look at a chart of what nutrients uptake at what pH you can see there’s no “perfect” pH that gets the best of all worlds.
So I agree with what you’re saying Tony.
You also do this in dwc grows. Start between 6 to 6.5 and the PH will go up while the nutes go down and you are maintaining water level. Its a must in dwc or you get lock outs. I see that this would be beneficial in all types of grows
If I see a ca deficiency I’ll hit them with the juice, dry back some then hit the higher ph water once.
A lot of times the medium gets a little too acid causing deficiency.
Especially since i use fox farm and it’s mostly coco!
Man I love those maple leaf indica looking leaf sets. Listening intently to the PH info, I feel like I’ve noticed that in the CA deficiencies trying to keep all my shit watered at 6.5. I always just assumed it was the plant getting rootbound and whatnot but I might have to try letting the PH swing, our water comes out of the tap right around 7 so it’d be cool not to have to adjust it if even for a little while
If I had to take an educated guess I would say deep chunk is originally from northern Pakistan in Kashmir.
The long petioles hold the leaf away from the main stem and Aid in airflow in a wet region. Of course this should mean that deep chunk has some mold resistance if I am right and I don’t know whether it does or not. Specifically, deep chunk looks remarkably similar to Neelum Valley Kashmir genetics, which hold short stocky leafy plants with small flowers and high potency.
They are looking awesome.
Pretty quirky looking variety, standout and unique.
Thanks for sharing.