Well enjoy yourself then.
BTW, I’ve been reading @Mrcrabs Grow Journal. Impressive his plants are. Apparently he’s had a lot of Grow experience. Seems like a nice, mellow guy. Good vibes.
Well enjoy yourself then.
BTW, I’ve been reading @Mrcrabs Grow Journal. Impressive his plants are. Apparently he’s had a lot of Grow experience. Seems like a nice, mellow guy. Good vibes.
Get on there and chat with us man. We have fun with songs and picking at @Mrcrabs breakfast choices. I think I’ll stick with apples until he gets the sauce right rofl
Nice collection of stones my friend, I’m starting from the top , haha , I’ll be along in a few
I will @Gremmall, I will.
But any ideas about my Schizandra’s bottom two leaves? Old age you think? They seem to be yellowing, but they have those white spots top side of leaf and black spots underneath leaf.
I’ll be by soon. Spent a good time reading your journal last night. I was impressed.
I downloaded a few of your photos to let me know what healthy Marijuana plants look like. Hope you don’t mind.
BTW, @Mrcrabs. Any idea about Schizandra’s bottom two leaves? Should I be worried? She is an Auto Northern Lights and is in her third day of her seventh week. She is an outdoor Grow but I take her in at night and take her out in the morning at about eight when the temperature is above 65 degrees Fahrenheit and the sun’s just coming out.
I’m no practiced eye but my bottoms just yellowed a few days ago and there was no dmg just changed color…I give myself 6 grows before I feel competent helping others tho I try. You guys should see the posts I’ve typed then abandon lol. Stupid bong
i don’t need no damn six grows, i’m a dumbass and i and everyone knows it. first thing to do @Prince33 is get a loupe out and check to make sure it isn’t bugs. one of the things you need to keep an eye out for if you put stuff outside. but i’m drunk so it doesn’t count lol. but… you are going to lose some leaves to yellowing and stuff, as long as it doesn’t get too bad all is cool. but get a loupe to make sure you haven’t got critters.
You mean to say, critters can almost be microscopic?
Guess a 60x power loupe is what to use, from my readings here?
And if I do, spray with an insecticide soap or whatever?
yes, need 30x to 60x scope to see aphids and spyder mites, and some other type crap
Thanks @monkman!
np bud, and yes, love you folks north of the border! spent a lot of time in windsor, the only place in canada south of USA
Actually, @monkman, I’m in Massachusetts, just like the red maple leaf.
sorry, thought it was a canuck leaf
@monkman is on the right track, once daylight hits check out under her leaves and look in her soil , looking for bug infestations, if not bugs it might be mold and mildew, but there’s a soultuion for that also my friend., over all she looks healthy, keep up the good job
Okay . . . thanks
I just had a similar look on a seedling. Found some microscopic caterpillar bunched up under the first real set of leaves. I tried to grab it and it escaped on a web to the soil! Impressive.
I grabbed my magnified glasses but could not find it. Upon magnified inspection of the leaves I found small black eggs.
Check early morning under leaves for sure.
Order ladybugs and get you some “Garden Friendly Fungicide” by Southern Ag
Thanks a bunch @Stonedagain2!
Have found a supplier of premium summer Lady Bugs located in the High Sierra mountains of California.
Gave instructions on how and how much to release given the size of garden and how to store them in the refrigerator but only for thirty minutes maximum.
Thanks, @Mrcrabs. They’re a pleasure to look at. Been collecting them past thirty years. They give off a lot of force, feel it in my middle, especially when they’ve been just washed in cold running water, which I gotta do every month or so.
They pick up all kinds of energy from me and from people coming into the room.
Saw small dark little critters, about 1/32” crawling around inside the pot weeks ago, about her second week. They looked so small didn’t think they’d harm the plant. They may have been Aphids. Used to see them back home as a boy, on Gardenia flower petals, black little critters.