OK. I have moved 11 of the 20 into 5" round containers. These 11 are the ones that have started showing the second set of leaves.

Hudson, you were right on about being root-bound. The ones with the leaves sagging the most had the most well established root system. Those that were not sagging were easily transplanted, as the dirt just fell away. I wish I would have taken pictures.

So I have 3 I am concerned about. After transplanting they are drooping even more. Their color is still a vibrant green, but they just look very lazy. One even appears to have a fold in a leave. I read somewhere on here that may be due to high ph of the water. I have been using plain tap water that I have not tested. I have purchased soil test kits but not for water, YET.

Will try to get pictures up later. Time to CHILL :rastasmoke:
Cede2Weed Reviewed by Cede2Weed on . Noob on the Cheap I have a little experience growing outdoors. We basically used large numbers to guarantee success and were at the mercy of the seasons. Long story short, the land we grew on is no longer available to us and I am not the type that would even consider guerrilla growing. I have ready many, many, posts on this board and am very excited. At the same time, the more I read, the more differing views I get. So I have decided to just jump in, splash around and hope If I am not able to swim a Rating: 5