Quote Originally Posted by pepurr
Droopy was droopy every sense she was a wee lass. Even after she gets water, she only looses a little droopiness. I think it is because she is sad. You see, she is an orphan. She never had the chance to meet her parents or get to know them. When she was just a baby she was ripped from her mother's arms, and smuggled thousands of miles from her home. That's when I met her. She looked so cute, with her red hair and all. I couldn't just leave her to languish inside a plastic bag. :yeahright:
Aww, pepurr, don't make me cry...

Quote Originally Posted by pepurr
I had thought of LST and Topping. For this grow, I decided to not do any of that. I don't want to take any chance, no matter how small, of screwing this up. Then on the next grow I'll experiment with one of them.
The first time you bend a plant 90 degrees sideways, and tie it with string, are some of the Scariest Moments In Horticulture that one ever experiences. It is in some ways like deliberate abuse, but it isn't, as long as one does it gently (and with consent..?)

It's actually easier than you think on the plants, and easier than you think, to do... and when one sees multiple tops coming out of a healthy main stalk that one has to basically chase around the pot...

Quote Originally Posted by pepurr
I'm a bit of an old timer, I guess. Back in my younger days, we never heard of LST or Topping. We would get a few bags of Black Cow, some soil, and then make a grow deep in the forests of North East Florida. They grew tall and fast in that hot, humid Florida sunshine. Good smoke too. Not as powerful as some I see now days, but still worth while.
oOOH, that musta bin sum gooooood, stanky stuph...

Quote Originally Posted by pepurr
They have to stay indoors the entire grow. I would love to put them outside for some natural light, but there isn't any good spot, out of sight, to do that round here.
I hear that. Keep dem lumens up, mon! Your stuph looks good, and you have a sense of style