Main news of the week: weโre saying goodbye to #6. She went straight to compost.
Sounds dramatic, I know. But honestly, itโs pretty simple: she wasnโt growing, had no real buds, smelled like wet coco โ literally the same coco she was sitting in โ and on top of that, she decided to go hermie. Wellโฆ happens.
If it had been a worthy plant, Iโd probably bother picking the nanners off and trying to save her. But this one was clearly some kind of outcast from the start. Plus, I still hadnโt tossed #1 and #2, and suddenly a proper pot spot under the light opened up.
So #6 got chopped, and the little ones were moved into one pot. They had been living in 0.3L cups this whole time anyway.
What else, what elseโฆ
At the beginning of the week, I sprayed chitosan for the second and final time. For the next three weeks, the only real stress they should get is UV. Well, maybe the main light too, to some degree. It feels like there might be too much lightโฆ but also maybe not. I donโt see any clear downside yet, so Iโll keep it at full power for now.
Thatโs 320W main light + 40W under-canopy light + 20W blue during peak hours.
Development is steady. Bud sites are swelling, leaf tips are slightly burnt, so weโre clearly riding the edge here. Vertical stretch has basically stopped โ maybe just a couple more centimeters added.
That means irrigation-wise Iโm switching back to a more vegetative strategy: keeping the substrate as wet as possible, with a small dryback of around 15%. Of course, every plant drinks differently, so itโs easier said than done. In reality, one sits closer to 10%, another one closer to 25%.
The feed is almost unchanged in terms of EC and pH: EC 1.33 / pH 5.8. But potassium and phosphorus are slowly going up.
Thatโs it for now. The fun part is still ahead. For now, we sit, rub our little paws together, and watch the buds get fat.