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Nomaad OD:2010

T

Trinity Gold

Porter House Uber Alles..two steaks on a stick baby!!!

The hot temps choking them out thing is kinda related to just indoor..out side when it gets very hot and they have enough water in the root zone and plenty of root space , they grow multiple inches per day. ....from expanding their root zone to look for water and the uptake of water that they have when its hot is in hyper drive..so if all the variables are good then heat(95+ days...) = explosive growth..



Good luck bro. MycoStop will help you big time, but you do need to get some kind of product like Root Shield and get that on them ASAP...I think 3D organics has a product that is the same as root shield but way way more expensive if you want to go that route..
 

nomaad

Active member
Veteran
Man... what a clusterfuck. MGS Horticultural, after promising overnight shipping, sent it 2-day. Its should be here today as per tracking... but not till the end of the day.

The 3D product of which you speak is called Thrid Eye and its made in Mendo... so I should have no problem getting my hands on it. Good lookin out on that, beefcake. :)

As soon as I pull tarp in 36 minutes, I am going to yank that one very sick plant. Its all good, as I have about 20 big plants that I was going to trash because they are flowering and unsuitable to be plugged in a fulkl season garden. I'll just pick one or two that fit just right in the spot I am going to be clearing out.

I pride myself on being out in front of problems like this... so this is really fucking with my head. Obviously, next year, this will be done early as a preventative rather than a catch-up clusterfuck with dead plants involved.
 

localhero

Member
its just so weird that its only that one plant. i lost a few passion fruit due to root rot, from my dog pissing on them constantly. only one of them came back but it took forever. i didnt have mycostop though. waiting over here to see what happened.

ps- thats not a favorite corner for your dog to mark is it?
 

nomaad

Active member
Veteran
no, but the cat has been known to shit in garden beds. pretty sure she only did it once, early on... pretty easy to spot... so no, i can't see it being pet-effluent related. But good problem crunching suggestion nonetheless.

The plant is pulled... roots did not look great... the majority of noticeable rot was around the base of the stalk, just below soil level. There was little sign of sliminess on the roots themselves. I was hoping for about 1lb from that plant. That's farming.
 

phatsesh

Member
Are they all in a smart pot? What kind of plants share the same pot, it looks mixed indicas next to sativas, if i feed my sativas on the same schedule my indies are on then i get that over watered look. When i get to that stage i generally just skip a feeding or 2 maybe more cause of root damage but mine are in individual pots or all the same strain in a planter. Also the soil round the ugly looks wet when the others are dry. Adding things will keep the soil wet and possibly continue the prob.

mind went blank bbl
 
T

Trinity Gold

Get some Companion from Water Planet as well. It will help with the stem rot.
 

nomaad

Active member
Veteran
Phatsesh: that is a 6'x9' smartbed with 6 Sour D clones from the same mom. Not all my beds are completely homogeneous, but that one is. We have a lot of perlite in the beds great drainage. Nothing gets watered until it reads dry on a meter. That plant looks wet because the soil around the stalk was disturbed to check for rot and the accumulated perlite was mixed back into the soil.
 
I just received my MycoStop but the directions are hard for me to grasp. Tri and any other for that matter: can you help tell me how incorp. into my medium properly?
 
T

Trinity Gold

LB530 - Take whatever grams you have put it in a half gallon of water and stir, wait 30 minutes, stir again and mix with 12 gallons of water. 1 gallon of spray per pot on the soil surface then come back and do a top watering enough to soak down 2-4" with in a half hour.
 

nomaad

Active member
Veteran
pH only matters when you are feeding your plants. the plant takes up different nutes at different pH levels. unless you have water that is so high or low as to be inhospitable to life, you should be fine without adjusting pH for application of microlife.

Thanks TG for your guidance.
 
T

Trinity Gold

Hey nomaad, just checking in on you. Hope all is well after that stem rot debacle.. It really hurts to lose a nice one like that, luckily as you said you can replace and keep rollin'....

I know next year I will have a QP of mycostop on hand at the start of the season...

One little note, your satellite garden, hit it with some mycostop. When healthy roots get hit with that stuff they expand like crazy...with root hairs and a more branchy root system. Ideal time to hit them, too..
 

nomaad

Active member
Veteran
Heh. You can bet your ass I will be hitting EVERYTHING with MycoStop over the next two days. I had 50 grams delivered yesterday. The chilled batch has a totally different consistency than the stuff that came warm. Much more spongy and almost pasty compared to the dry powdery consistency of the warm stuff.
 

onetime64

Member
how should i apply mycostop.... i was thinking 1/2g in 4gal sprayer and spray root zone and foliage....

also trinity gold.....
how much vitamin c per gal..... and what do u mix it with....
also how much oxidate per gal and what do u mix it with.....


how much brix mix powder per gal.............
 
T

Trinity Gold

how should i apply mycostop.... i was thinking 1/2g in 4gal sprayer and spray root zone and foliage....

also trinity gold.....
how much vitamin c per gal..... and what do u mix it with....
also how much oxidate per gal and what do u mix it with.....


how much brix mix powder per gal.............

You can find a post by me on the previous page about applying mycostop.

I stay far far away form Oxidate.

I use 1/2 of PVFS recommended amounts of Brix Mix powder and liquid.
I put 1/4 tsp per gallon Vitamin C
 

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