Love it. very well explained. The details are primoMyself mostly - this is my 'grow memory'
when did I flip those? etc.
Love it. very well explained. The details are primoMyself mostly - this is my 'grow memory'
when did I flip those? etc.
What sad is in that brain of yours, this picture resided waiting on time to rear it's ugly head. Scary stuff
Just my limited experience, so take with a grain of salt...This is what I'm gonna try to do this time. 8 tops. I'm have to post some pictures in my thread and get your opinion.
Essentially all my plants are WAY too big when I put them in flower. In my opinion. So I figure topping twice might help.
The ones that are in my RDWC system where about 20" or so tall after veg and I topped a couple of those down to 3/4 tops early in veg. Well they streched like a bitch. They at least doubled if not 2.5 times their original height. So I have a hard time just leaving the very tops. I need to get my timing down better. Perpetual is tough to get the hang of when that's where you start.
Yeah I'm thinking so to in hydro. I still haven't topped then yet but when I do I'll post some pictures.Just my limited experience, so take with a grain of salt...
Mainling vs. Topping.
Mainling will slow that growth down. I could veg a plant for 2+ months and keep it very compact. Nice root systems, and generally I find they are happier, healthier plants.
Normal Topping doesn't slow things down nearly as much. And when I say normal topping, I mean where you top and keep at least 2 nodes below where you topped. These plants hardly skip a beat, so it's definitely faster this way if you desire multiple tops. However, they tend to have a stretchier/lankier structure.
There's pros and cons to both.
Edit: I'm in soil, so a 2 month veg just means keep hacking away at it and add water. YMMV in hydro.
For clarification - for me and whomever else you what you are talking about is still topping them (removing the top of a limb where a cola would form) but it's where you top them and when right?Just my limited experience, so take with a grain of salt...
Mainling vs. Topping.
Mainling will slow that growth down. I could veg a plant for 2+ months and keep it very compact. Nice root systems, and generally I find they are happier, healthier plants.
Normal Topping doesn't slow things down nearly as much. And when I say normal topping, I mean where you top and keep at least 2 nodes below where you topped. These plants hardly skip a beat, so it's definitely faster this way if you desire multiple tops. However, they tend to have a stretchier/lankier structure.
There's pros and cons to both.
Yep, we're on the same page about topping/mainlining. I've done both, I see them both as valuable tools depending on what the current time/space constraints are.For clarification - for me and whomever else you what you are talking about is still topping them (removing the top of a limb where a cola would form) but it's where you top them and when right?
My understanding is that a mainline is where you top at the first good set of shoots and only keep two. Then top those two at the fery next node keeping the next two shoots (4), then those four for 8, etc. Meaning that the plant is not feeding any secondary shoots, just the ones you have selected.
So mainlining to get 4 tops, versus just topping and leaving 4 limbs is what you are talking about right?
Thanks for helping clarify the differences in my head. I'll definitely keep all this in mind.Yep, we're on the same page about topping/mainlining. I've done both, I see them both as valuable tools depending on what the current time/space constraints are.
I'm definitely a visual learner. I am going to do a big drop and pheno hunt shortly - not for breeding, just because I want a lot of one pheno and have an outlet for the other. I may play around with a few of these seedlings to get back in the groove and mainline that crop.Thanks for helping clarify the differences in my head. I'll definitely keep all this in mind.
My mainlines come from the shoots at the third node, topped when there are 5 sets of leaves, working on the sixth. I’ll have to check for this “runtyness” you speak of.I'm definitely a visual learner. I am going to do a big drop and pheno hunt shortly - not for breeding, just because I want a lot of one pheno and have an outlet for the other. I may play around with a few of these seedlings to get back in the groove and mainline that crop.
For mainlining it is best to keep the shoots from node 4 (first true leaves) because they aren't as likely to have a runty limb side of the plant.
I'll take pics when the lights come on. I have been doing roughly the same thing for a few years now with the same results. It depends on strain, but if you are going to have less than stellar tops they will come from the earlier nodes.My mainlines come from the shoots at the third node, topped when there are 5 sets of leaves, working on the sixth. I’ll have to check for this “runtyness” you speak of.