OK. As I mentioned patience is necessary or you're liable to kill them with kindness. Sometimes too much patience isn't good. For example my ladies have seemingly stunted and/or there was a nute lockout problem that almost killed the God Bud. I've since repotted the failing God ladies and they "seem" to be doing better even though all I did was open a new bag of potting soil and gently remove the old soil where the roots hadn't taken off an place it back in a fresh layer. Well, that seems to be greening up the GB so I also inspected some of the Lime, Purp, and 707 Headband and did the same gentle soil refresh on a few. I was expecting to see weak roots in all cases but one Lime root system looked really good and the others were batter than expected. I'm waiting a few days to verify it helps before I do anything to the others as I may just put them in bigger pots if the roots look good.

Can you over do it on mycorrhizae, I did give it a liberal dose?
eastbaygordo Reviewed by eastbaygordo on . EBG Log for 2010 I've learned a few things as I've been around the block once. Hopefully this year I can prevent some of my problems by following my own rules. I think patience is the biggest asset a grower has. This year I'm growing Lime, 707 Headband, God Bud, and Purple Kush. I started on 6/1 and so far I haven't killed any plants but they do look a little stressed from going from indoor to outdoor. I was seeing some very happy ladies reaching up for light and then put them in the sunlight too long Rating: 5