Jones Organic Indoor Journal

I’m slowly figuring it out lol

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Me too man, living soil has an infinite learning curve. Always more to learn, but that’s the fun of it.
The more mistakes you make, the more you find out.

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He’s outside now going back to reveg I suppose only other thing I could do is put him under my t5 think I’ma just let these two breed and see what happens a slurricane and a lemon hashplant

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Was it tough to dig him out?

In new soil now?

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Don’t want to sound like a know it all, but I think the plants outside do much better it’s because the plants inside are starved for oxygen. The plant on left is starting to show that healthy green, the other one is going to come back too.

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Not to bad I just reached my hands around and kind of shook all the soil loose there was a big root ball that formed under the fertil pot was surprised by how big one of the roots was it thickened up a lot about the size of a small pen not the real fat ones but compared to how scraggly they just were that’s a big difference I was going to take a picture but I always feel rushed when roots are exposed and I’m transplanting don’t want to stress them out

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I leave the backdoor open 24/7 with a fan blowing air on them trying to keep the air exchanged best I can and I leave the tent flaps cracked open front and back so they’re not totally sealed up otherwise it gets real hot without an inline fan

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Well that was fast the top of the stem is super soft and bendy somebody isn’t happy

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It’s gonna need a couple of days to recover. Hope the temperature difference isn’t too much.

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Eh maybe a little chillier outside but like I said I leave the back door open but its not under the heat of the light anymore

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Don’t plants use Co2 instead of oxygen?

Maybe you know something I don’t.

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@Badger Yeah I learned in school that plants convert co2 to oxygen, that’s well known. Later on I heard this theory that they actually use both, depending if it’s daytime or night. I was also referring to the roots which makes sense why smartpots work so well. I could be wrong.

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I’m sure that the oxygen to the roots could have something to do with it. You had me totally confused for a minute.

Everything needs oxygen, so that wouldn’t surprise me.

I love my fabric pots.

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@Badger Yep I just google it, oxygen is a byproduct of photosynthesis, at night it consumes oxygen and puts out co2. What a weird world we live in.

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Did it look like it had root rot?

How was the soil moisture?

Hopefully just a lil transplant shock, how big was the rootball/fertil pot in comparison to the new (up?) pot? I imagine it went into new soil correct? I’m sure it will recover if so… I could be wrong, but I feel like I heard you want a bit more moisture to help with transplant shock, but also, once again I could be wrong…

Anything I mention is almost more of a pointer for you to look up… then you can come back and confirm or contrast for all of us :wink:

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No root rot roots looked pretty healthy from a glance I didn’t inspect them to much though. The other pot didn’t even have a root ball, that formed from time I placed them from the pot to the bed and that wasn’t in the bed to long. I watered the new pot with some plant probiotics it’s supposed to help with stress though that probably works better doing it beforehand but hey I didn’t know I was transplanting him today

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@Badger Dude sick profile pic are you making them yourself?

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@CADMAN made it awhile back while he was just messing around. He has some real skills bro.

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