Quote Originally Posted by 9ski9
Knowms pic is a perfect example of using multiple CFL's on one plant. Of course, there would then be issues of lost light...

Should I?

Fuck.

Maybe some white marble chips or crushed white stones that are non-absorbant on top of the soil. It will help reflect some of the light lost into the dark soil. First, though, you can bring the soil level up a bit. That'll make her more sturdy. And yes, point a fan on her enough to get her to gently flutter. The movement will make her grow a stronger main stem. You should not have to support a seedling.

Do your cups have drainage holes? Plastic cups gather moisture in the bottom and will rot your roots. Make sure when repotting to use some crushed stones, pottery, or best of all, the tan lava rock, which will hold some moisture and your roots will grow right into them.

I'd also suggest wrapping your pots in tin foil, with the dull side out.

No nutes, yet. But look for a tiny bottle of SuperThrive in your local garden store. A drop or two per gallon of water is big help. It's vitamins for your roots. Costs $4.

I'd also suggest using luke warm bottled water with a PH around 6.8. All the water I've been buying has been in that general range. I test it with an aquarium test kit. Just add a drop to a sample of water and it turns a ceratin color that matches up to a chart. Costs $4.

Young plants do like nitrogen. When she's a bit older, you may consider getting some bat guano. Just Google it. You'll be looking for something along the lines of an 11-1-1 mix. Nitrogen is that first number.

More pics, though. Let us see your grow area...

Hope this helps.

And always remember: Knowm loves you.
Listen to 9skis... He's covered everything. For the time being

Peace