And a White Widow is in it’s wet paper towel. Couldnt resist.
That is a good smoke when ya just do not want to sit. ![]()
Hello hello (tapping on the screen) @SirBuddy ,you ok Amy?
Hello Bentstick. Yes, I’m okay. Thank you. Just been a little busy :). I’ll be back in the swing of things soon…
Good to hear, just a lil concerned when ya disappear for a bit. ![]()
Thanks Bentstick. I just heard last week that growing where I live could compromise living here. Im guessing because of the government’s assistance to some in the building. Despite it being legal to grow in this state, not here. It’s upsetting somewhat but Im going to continue the solo cup growing. It is kind of fun. I read that when the roots hit the side or bottom of the pot it’s growing in the hormone is released and will send the plant into budding. Thats for autos anyway. I planted a WW and it sprouted. It didnt have helmet head but the skin on from the seed hull stuck on it. Nope, I couldnt just leave it be. I dropped a few water drops on it and when I grabbed the skin, I guess I had more, and I pulled the neonate away from the seed. I was pissed at myself. Anyway, after some type of inspection here I’m dropping one again. Ok, nothing more from here and I’ll post something on your page a little more often!
Sux on the housing to do Sis, doing a Solo grow this winter grow using 32 oz cups 16 so far planned will tag when it kicks off, have a Awesome night and sleep well.
BUT, where there’s a will…
Yep! I found a way ![]()
So, game on yet again.
Paper towel time, lol!
Nice to hear ![]()
Maybe you can start a Solo Cup Challenge. I think that it would be fun! Would be a great Winter thing maybe? Just a thought.
Final comparison in Solo Cup growing
| Feature | Photoperiod | Autoflower |
|---|---|---|
| Yield potential in a solo cup | Higher (with proper training and timing) | Lower (high risk of stunting) |
| undefined | ---- | ---- |
| Control | High (can veg longer and use high-stress training) | Low (fixed cycle, sensitive to stress) |
| undefined | ---- | ---- |
| Best suited for | Growers aiming for maximum yield in a novelty format | Growers prioritizing speed and simplicity over final yield |
| undefined | ---- | ---- |
4 pm: White Widow, Grape, Afghan, and Wedding Cake photo germinating along with a Northern Light and an Unknown auto are germinating. All for Solo Cups…
That is about it
Question for you. Did you ever have a tap root grow up out of the soil? I didn’t get a picture but I moved the dirt and am trying to redirect it with getting more light on the seed part. It’s the White Widow, the first one I planted I accidentally murdered. Hopefully it will be okay.
So, I started with 2 and ended up with 6. Yippee, lol. Hope all is well up North.
The Grape only has one cotyledon, first time for that too and Chico says, Here we go again…
Nice to hear from you, yes I have had a few do that, I just carefully dig way under the seed slowly get up to the top and flip it root down and lightly cover it back, more than not make it. So far good up here weather has gotten better have a great evening. Good to hear from you.. And Chico looks chill… @SirBuddy
Well hello @SirBuddy. Nice start you have going, hope alls well in your world ![]()
Well ifin that is not a crazy lady nothing will be, 2 headed pot plant hehehehe.
Seedling week one done.
Week 2 and and Ms Grape may be a Whorled Phyllotaxy. Not sure but it’s okay because what I’ve read it may produce a little more. Go figure, a whore in it’s name, lol! Thanks Bentstick!
Top Left Wedding Cake photo, Bottom Left Afghan photo, Top Right White Widow photo, Bottom Right Northern Lights auto, Middle Top Mystery Auto, one gallon cloth pots, Middle Cup Grape photo (the whore). DLI 17… By the way for anyone interested this is Expert Soil with added Perlite and they seem to love it!
Have a great day!
Very cool Madame! ![]()
I learned a new term today, thank you! ![]()
For those of you that don’t feel like looking it up:
“Whorled phyllotaxy is a leaf arrangement where three or more leaves emerge from the same node on a plant stem, forming a whorl. This pattern is relatively uncommon, typically appearing in plants with very short internodes (the space between nodes), such as the genus Elodea or Galium, but can also be found in some trees like the Australian natives Brabejum stellatifolium and Macadamia.”







