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larry badiner

i just heard that in plant cells, the "part where light emits" is the center of the cell, so plants work like that concerning light

the math is

(o) <- expands with water
after water
( o ) <- absorbs more light
no water
(.) (dry) damages and repairs at a rate of x^2-3 depending how fast the water absorbs through the roots

im on the phone now discussing roots but i have no background in botany nor biology, so feel free to discuss truths and theories
 
L

larry badiner

concerning nutrients

heres how my buddy tells me it works
n1 p2 P3

it should work somewhat like this

321 - indica
231 - sativa
12 23 21 - indica/sativa

the ratios "depend on how much water a dry cell gets, the strain, and enviroment"

again just relaying stuff, i'll post later
 
Man a hardcore botanist would wonder what the hell your talking about, How about a little reference to what this conversation was about between you and your friend. If I can derive anything from your post is that you are trying to talk about the metabolism at which certain plants uptake water (Xylem and Phloem and transpiration). Also you seem to be mixing in the cell repair rate of plants with and without water( related to root pressure and transpiration) . Not sure what you are trying to conclude your statements, Im not trying to be an a**hole but i just cant figure out what you are trying to say
 

hush

Señor Member
Veteran
decoder_ring.jpg
 

Two-Dogs

Member
i just heard that in plant cells, the "part where light emits" is the center of the cell, so plants work like that concerning light

the math is

(o) <- expands with water
after water
( o ) <- absorbs more light
no water
(.) (dry) damages and repairs at a rate of x^2-3 depending how fast the water absorbs through the roots

im on the phone now discussing roots but i have no background in botany nor biology, so feel free to discuss truths and theories
The part where light emits is the sun
 
G

greenmatter

ask your friend if he waters with fruit juice and has ph problems.
 

bigwity

Active member
Veteran
hmmmmmmm i must be so thick man i didnt get a word of that was we talking cool aid ratio's
 
Larry brings up a good point. A plant might grow differently using a different ratio of NPK. That would mean that you give higher N to a Sativa to promote a bushy growth pattern, and higher P ratio to the Indica to make her tall. Or you can try giving more P to either to promote branching. I do not claim to be an expert though, that's just what I think. Does anyone know if in fact there is a link between nutrient ratio and growth pattern?
 

Clackamas Coot

Active member
Veteran
The original posts read like an involved PERL script which is quite a Herculean feat in the whole scheme of things.

CC
 
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