Outdoor with limited sunlight...

bud nugbong

Well-Known Member
You're doing a hell of a job. But it looks like your plant is going to outgrow that mini greenhouse. Plan for that and keep the inner scraggly branches trimmed. Like calico said those wont even see light anyways. It will help to get the air flowing through there and help prevent mold.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
You're doing a hell of a job. But it looks like your plant is going to outgrow that mini greenhouse. Plan for that and keep the inner scraggly branches trimmed. Like calico said those wont even see light anyways. It will help to get the air flowing through there and help prevent mold.
Thanks for the encouragement. :)

So far I've done a double layer of scrog to try and keep them short and wide and away from the roof. It's not a true greenhouse (although some day it could be), its not sealed up. Mostly at this stage its just there to keep the fall wind and rain off of them. Next year I'm going to plant about 6 weeks later, and scrog even more aggressively, I'd really like them to be about half the size they are.

My logic might be all wrong, but I've been intentionally letting them overgrow in terms of having lots of foliage. My understanding is that one reason to trim that stuff out as you go is so that the plant doesn't "waste energy" on the lower stuff that won't produce much. Well, for now I want this plant to waste energy there, as much as possible. If I take all that stuff off now and the plant "focuses" on its upper parts, I'm afraid it will grow even taller. My plan is to do a heavy trim early fall -- just as the buds really get going -- but for the most part just let them be for now. If the plant spreading out and getting thicker slows down the vertical growth, it works for me.

Of course, I completely understand that my "logic" is something I am entirely making up, and I have no idea if that's how it actually works. Or, I could call this an experiment.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
As I do my various bug and fungus sprays, I decided to change course and go ahead and trim them up properly... or at least what I understand to be properly. Their density of foliage just doesn't seem to be serving anyone. I suppose if I trim too much I could hurt the plant, but I doubt I'll go that far, and from my point of view at this point the less plant is there the better. My little experiment in growing in limited sunlight proved to be too successful, there's just too much plant here -- even after losing one four foot tall plant to maleness, and another I gave away. So I thinned the remaining four out extensively, in two passes.

This is the remains of the first pass
wheelbarrowtrimmings.jpg

And this is the second
2nd_trim.jpg

I tried to keep things nice and open, give lots of space for light and air.
nice-n-airy.jpg

Here's a blurry shot (sorry) of the Alien OG, my earliest bloomer
blurryalianbud.jpg

And here's where the next one in line is, the WiFi OG
wifi_1st-signs.jpg

And I know this has come up before in other threads but I don't remember the answer -- what's the deal with three part leaves? Is it a bad thing? My Alien has a lot of them...
threeleaves.jpg
 

Dan Drews

Well-Known Member
And I know this has come up before in other threads but I don't remember the answer -- what's the deal with three part leaves? Is it a bad thing? My Alien has a lot of them...
View attachment 3484992
Flip the leaf over and look with a magnifier. Your leaf looks like mine and I've got spider mites, but not too overwhelming yet. I've treated with Neem Oil several times, and now I'm using Spinosad.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
Flip the leaf over and look with a magnifier. Your leaf looks like mine and I've got spider mites, but not too overwhelming yet. I've treated with Neem Oil several times, and now I'm using Spinosad.
Gave that a try, didn't see any bugs with 30x magnification -- is that the only cause of partial leaf growth?
 

Dan Drews

Well-Known Member
Gave that a try, didn't see any bugs with 30x magnification -- is that the only cause of partial leaf growth?
My apologies, I was referring to the spots on the leaf and not the 3 leaves. I'm guessing the leaf count is most likely genetic, I doubt it's a problem for you but you do want to keep a close eye out for spider mites.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
My apologies, I was referring to the spots on the leaf and not the 3 leaves. I'm guessing the leaf count is most likely genetic, I doubt it's a problem for you but you do want to keep a close eye out for spider mites.
Good eye... but I think the spots you are seeing are from not applying Neem Oil correctly. The first time I did it just mixed it with cold water, and it sprayed unevenly leaving behind dull spots on the leaves, and eventually clogged the sprayer. The second time I mixed in a little ProTekt (per the Neem's instructions), and a tiny bit if dish soap, and I used warm water and shook it frequently -- applied much more evenly and no clogging.
 

innerG

Well-Known Member
often, plants will start putting out fewer blades on the leaves as they start flowering, especially when it's throwing out a bunch of new growth on all the branches at the same time.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
often, plants will start putting out fewer blades on the leaves as they start flowering, especially when it's throwing out a bunch of new growth on all the branches at the same time.
Thanks for the info. The plant looks really healthy, so I was hoping there was a simple explanation.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
As my first season gets closer to its end, the answer to my question is in the yard. Early in the season the plants grew slowly. As the summer progressed and the sun got higher they got more hours per day of nice strong sun, and they grew fast and full. As fall is here and the sun is dipping down in the southern sky again, in addition to shorter days in general, trees are blocking more light each day and the effects are showing.

The ones that are getting more light are maturing nicely and producing decent buds. The ones closer to the edge of the property that are more effected by the angle of the sun and perimeter trees blocking light, are turning into huge (relatively, about 6' x 6') bushes of popcorn buds. They are maturing more slowly and have fewer and smaller buds than the ones getting more light late in the season.

Since they are all different strains its possible that these are strain specific characteristics, but since I have clones of them growing indoors and they are maturing consistently to each other, that points to the light differences. So that's one lesson learned from my first outdoor grow.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
my plants get about 3-5 hours/day of direct sunlight that only covers half the plant and they are doing fine. they get a lot of reflective sunlight tho from neighbors house that has white siding on it.
Thanks for sharing that, good to know. I'm not sure what else to attribute the difference in my bud development to -- it seems pretty clear cut in my situation. But, that said, there definitely could be other factors I'm not aware of that could be holding back two of them.

Beautiful looking plants, btw.
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
Here are some pics. The first is the sky my plants see (looking south, trees to the east & west), as the sun gets lower as fall progresses, the light is cut down dramatically as it descends into the narrower parts of the "V" of the opening in the trees.

The next shot is the WhiteFire OG closer to the property line (getting less light), the other shot is the Alien OG, which gets more light. Seems like a huge difference to me. I've been using Happy Frog time release nutes, but I'm thinking of boosting with some other stuff I have next time I water. The leaves are for the most part consistent and green... I suppose you can't make up for less light with more nutes, but there isn't much else I have control over.

crack-in-the-sky.jpgwifi_9.23.jpg alien_9.23.jpg
 

WV: Jetson

Well-Known Member
As a newb outdoor grower, who only had two plants to begin with, but have a lot of experience with other home crops; I am always amazed at how quickly and dramatically the sun changes its arc in the fall. My 2 plants are in two different beds, a neighbor's tree now shades one bed for a goodly portion of the day, a month ago - it wasn't. Next years plants are all going in bed #2. That being said, plant #1 finished nice & early and is happily curing in the Man Cave! Ugh! Mongo like Bud! :weed:
 

Humanrob

Well-Known Member
How did it turn out - this was a great thread
Look closely... this thread was from 2015. But I suppose it's still relevant...

It turned out OK, the two that got more light finished well, the two that got less light molded up before they finished and were not harvested. The other lesson I learned was not to try to grow Sativas (or sativa dominant hybrids) when you have a short grow season. That was a loooong time ago. Cut down some trees to open up more sky after that summer, and then switched to autos and never looked back.

good luck to you ---
 

SF2LA

Member
haha yeah still v relevant - haven't been able to find much info on forced flowering and how long to continue for. that's awesome you were able to clear more space for light. do autos yield well outside (and are you in pots or in the ground)? i wish i had a yard!
 
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