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01-20-2011, 02:29 PM #11
Senior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
For those that are quitters, or those that wrongly said he was screwed, perhaps you should learn to grow before you give grow advise to others.
Seedling Stretch Fix (twords the bottom of the post)
Works 100% of the time if you properly care for 'em from that point forward. (lights, light distance, proper watering and fans)
Don't stop reading and learning or you'll end-up giving garbage advise down the line...
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01-20-2011, 04:33 PM #12
Senior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
I LIKE IT.....if you no what you are doing you can 99% of the time save a plant
Originally Posted by Rusty Trichome
you must research download growers guide's and learn also Google this is the way i learn'd to grow reading books and internet and im doing ok and of course cannabis.com.......great help and helpers good luck m8ty
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01-20-2011, 04:44 PM #13
Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
You'll definitely need some sort of support for that plant. Once they start doing that (as though they were reaching out for the sun) at some point they'll start developing and then their stem will not be able to support all that weight.
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01-20-2011, 05:07 PM #14
Senior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
also for the weight heavy top plants i suggest getting a large drinking straw like the ones from say Mc Donald's cut it down so that its just smaller than the plant. then cut down the middle all the way up so that it opens up and you can wrap it round the plant gently then push in to the soil slightly that should support them untill stems get bigger and fatter then you can just simply take them off
i have never tried this just somthink i thought of sitting hear i can only hope this works and no reason why it shouldn't let us no what happens Gooood luck
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01-20-2011, 11:31 PM #15
Junior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
First off, they're probably bag seed so its not as if he spent a bunch of money on good genetics.
Originally Posted by Rusty Trichome
Secondly, I wasn't saying its impossible, all I said was hes only got about a week invested. It wouldnt kill him to scratch this attempt and start over.
So before you jump down peoples throats, imagine for a second that your not the only one on this site who's grown before.:thumbsup:
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01-21-2011, 12:48 PM #16
Senior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
Sooo...you avoid giving out solid advise unless the gardener has spent thousands on equipment, or has purchased their strains from a designer seed botique?
Originally Posted by DirtyApe
You're right. We all should be quitters. Much easier to quit than to learn proper techniques, and this being an abject failure thing is easy to get used to. :thumbsup:
Originally Posted by DirtyApe
A quick show of hands...Who out there likes learning half-assed techniques and lazy approaches to gardening...? :wtf: ...Anyone...?
Imagine for a second that you have the experience to actually offer sound advise. Wow...what a help you could be...
Originally Posted by DirtyApe
Before you start thinking that it's up to you what folks in here do, keep in mind...You have to develop personal experience before you can share that experience. And if your comfortable with your facts, you damn well better be able to defend them rather than justifying bad advise and getting your panties in a wad when called-out.
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01-21-2011, 05:03 PM #17
Junior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
Are you serious? I've given out solid advice. I stick by the fact that he's off to a terrible start, why not give it another go and this time do it right. What makes you think that he will be able to save these babies. Clearly this guy hasn't done his homework, your wasting your time.
Originally Posted by Rusty Trichome
No problem with starting fresh. Not quitting, just starting off on the right foot. You learn as you go but better to not start in the whole if you have little to no experience.:beatdeadhorse:You're right. We all should be quitters. Much easier to quit than to learn proper techniques, and this being an abject failure thing is easy to get used to. :thumbsup:
A quick show of hands...Who out there likes learning half-assed techniques and lazy approaches to gardening...? :wtf: ...Anyone...?
LOL. Just because Im new HERE doesnt mean Im new. Dont look at my post count and jump to conclusions.:icon506:Imagine for a second that you have the experience to actually offer sound advise. Wow...what a help you could be...
Before you start thinking that it's up to you what folks in here do, keep in mind...You have to develop personal experience before you can share that experience. And if your comfortable with your facts, you damn well better be able to defend them rather than justifying bad advise and getting your panties in a wad when called-out.
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01-21-2011, 06:15 PM #18
Senior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
So Nikki...what did you end up doing?
In his last post, the Nikki asked if there was anything he (she?) could do to save them. How to start over was not part of his inquiry, now was it?
Originally Posted by DirtyApe
Fixing what you've done wrong is an invaluable tool to have, and quitting before you learn anything is a great way to avoid developing ANY experience.
My experience tells me they are 100% fine, with proper care and handling.
And are you sure it's HIM I'm wasting my time with...? :wtf:
Unless, of course, you can't afford those designer seeds or if you have the experience of someone online to help you through the rough spots. If you are incapable of being helpful, and if you must continue slamming someone else's experience level, and if you insist on assuming you know his situation or desire to be inadequate, perhaps you should let the more experienced gardeners do the helping. There's plenty of us here to take-up the slack.
Originally Posted by DirtyApe
It wasn't your post count I was looking at when I commented on your 'quitter' technique.
Originally Posted by DirtyApe
This is a simple and reliable fix for seedling stretch. Matter of fact, I use it damn near every grow, especially with the more leggy sativa dominates.
Your opinion of me is nothing I'll lose sleep over, but just because you think I'm an ass, does not mean I'm not right. However, it does indicate that I don't play 'politically correct' games with fragile ego's nor those that just wish to argue.
Let us know what happened, eh Nikki...? :thumbsup:
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01-21-2011, 11:20 PM #19
Senior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
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01-22-2011, 12:31 AM #20
Junior Member
1 week old and tall and skinny - dont look right
Alright...OP. Im done arguing with rusty trombone.
My advice stands. Yes there is a way to fix stretched seedlings, you can bury the seedling up to just below the first set of leafs.
OR....you can scratch this attempt and use what you've learned on a brand new set of seeds...and within a week you'll have already gotten past this point.
You've already learned your lesson from this one. No need to struggle with it. Start over.
:twocents:
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