Leafs yellow in small pots because the plant start to rearrange nutrients from the fan leafs to the blossoms. This is because the roots can’t pull enough nutrients because they are restricted in a small pot. This even happend in hydro with too small pots and too large bushes.
IF you want to take down a Colombian jungle weed at 77 or 84 days, you are a fool!
See, this is also not correct. The majority of landrace equatorial sativas I’ve have been dealing with are green and lush until the day you cut it down. Even though this haze have had NL outcross, it should be green and lush at this point.
Let’s see pictures of these 100+ day narrowleafs you’re pulling down then.
I’ve seen people grow literal bushes in 2g coco pots. I’ve seen people grow massive plants in a single big rockwool cube w/ drippers. It isn’t pot size.
Oldest leaves yellow and fall off. And I feed the same strength all the way through, seedling-harvest. It can be somewhat variety dependent.
So because you think you are the best damn grower on the planet and you got anecdotes of HUUUUUGE plants in small containers, root bound plants doesn’t exist, or they are a matter of underfeeding.
This is some sort of a joke. I got nothing further to say to you. Wish you all the best.
I find if your leaves are green all the way through to harvest, you’re gonna have a lot more sugar leaf trimming to do than if you fed them in a way that they would drop most of their fans by harvest.
I can see that. I also find a lot of broadleaf varieties tend to yellow less. The leaves stay dark green but tend to get really ratty and brittle toward the end. Chem, for example.