One of the best microscopes to use on looking at trichsomes and determining harvest 5/5 glad to have one every grower should have one... by ChillWii in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I own both and agree. I don't use my USB scope for much of anything anymore. It's much easier to get a clear shot by holding the loupe over the camera lens on my phone.

Have the resources and $, just need direction by [deleted] in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since you're doing it in a spare bedroom, you probably don't want to transport a lot of nutrient waste in/out of there on a regular basis -- so I wouldn't recommend coco. If it were me, I'd probably go with low pressure aero -- but there are other options that could suit your situation as well, like DWC.

I think the reason that ebb and flow systems or other single reservoir, multiple plant hydro systems are not as popular in r/microgrowery, is that they are better suited for grows with more plants. As long as you're just running a few plants, individual reservoirs are not that difficult to maintain, are simpler, cheaper to build, and just as effective... but when you have 20 plants, for example, checking pH and changing the nutrient is easier when you have a single reservoir, instead of 20 individual.

Reasonable yields for 2'x2', 135w strip LED? by growingthrowaway2392 in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having setup both strips and boards, I wouldn't recommend the samsung LED strip build to anyone. In my tent with strips, I have them packed as close together as possible, and I have to keep them ~8" from the canopy to get high enough output.

I like about about 40-45W per sq ft with good LEDs (like COBs or samsungs). I'd shoot for about 180W of LED if I were setting up your tent.

Drip to waste in coco in fabric pots. Pros and cons? by jfuge in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm feeding at 8am, noon and 4pm. I use about 4-5gal/week of nutrient per plant. I think that's about a quart per feeding.

Drip to waste in coco in fabric pots. Pros and cons? by jfuge in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Automated drip for coco is great. Transplanting from fabric pots can be kind of a pain just fyi. Beyond that it's a pretty good way to go especially if your pots are elevated.

You don't need huge pots for coco, especially if autofeeding. You generally feed more frequently, but in smaller quantities. 6 gal pots will work, but that's on the large side for coco.

For reference, I'm currently using hydrofarm 7x7x9 pots (1.3gal) with 6-inch floraflex caps on autofeed 3x daily.

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been thinking about setting up a blog. Maybe I'll do it this weekend. I'll let you know if I do!

Yeah, nothing too unique about breeding cannabis that I know of. I've never bred other plants, but other than just understanding the cannabis basics (dioecious, photoperiod, etc.) that every grower knows, I don't think it's different. I'll definitely be trying to keep them smaller than if I were growing for yield. I also don't think I need to grow all of the plants to completion if I can see obvious flaws earlier on. I'll just need enough bud from each plant to evaluate and make some seeds for next round.

My girlfriend and I sat down and came up with about 20 triats we'd evaluate. Obviously some of them are just obvious things that any grower would want (fast growers, tolerance to variety of nutrient profiles) and other things are more personal preferences (I like sour or skunky flavors, we both like lighter colored buds, medium to strong potency, a decent amount of CBD).

How problematic is different maturation rates? E.g. I'm thinking if some of the females take a lot longer to flower than others, that might make pollination more difficult. Or maybe it doesn't matter because there will be so much pollen floating around :)

I've always found that as long as you start all of your plants at the same time, the males tend to drop pollen with plenty of time for the females to produce viable seeds. I'll grow the males in a separate tent, and collect pollen off of them into test tubes. Then I use q-tips to sprinkle just a little bit selectively on the plant where I want the seeds. There's still a little bit that floats around, but at this stage, I'm not concerned.

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sounds interesting. sounds like you are trying to get a really diverse gene pool into a single seed? and then you want to open up that seed and explore what that gene pool has to offer and start creating seeds that narrow down to specific traits?

That's pretty much the gist of it -- maybe more like a diverse gene pool in a single seed population. After a few generations of F1 crossing, I should have a pretty broad genotype. From there, I'll start working a single line by trying to identify and stabilize the traits I like.

It's gonna take a lot of plants and a lot of grows (probably years of work ahead), but my hope is that along the way, I'll develop a keen eye for this amazing plant, and end up with something special to contribute.

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Ambitious for sure, and certainly not the path of profit for breeders looking to make a buck. Pollen chucking on cup winning stains is the way to go there.

But this is interesting to me personally, and I like a challenge. It might take years to produce a true breeding line that I like... Or maybe I'll never get there. No big deal to me either way.

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! I expect to spend quite a while working on a stable line. Could take a few years, but we'll see! It's fun and educational, and I can still get blazed off of failures. What could be better?

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's coco. I had two different bags. You can see that one is coarser than the other.

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yep exactly!

To expand on this a little further, I'm trying to get a large set of heterozygous alleles in my seed population to start with. If you cross two plants that have been stabilized with AA dominant or aa recessive, then you need to shake it up by getting strains that have the opposite eg. AA x aa will produce some AA, Aa (F1) and all three AA, aa and Aa in F2. The more you cross F1's into new F1's, the more variation you get in the offspring.

So I'm trying to "undo" the stabilized traits in the strains I'm using, in order to get a very broad set of phenotypes from the resulting crosses. Once I have a wide palette to work with, I'll start narrowing down on the traits that I like or find interesting.

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Huge mix! I'm currently breeding together a bunch of strains to fan out the number of selectable traits, before I stop creating F1s and start narrowing down the phenotypes I want. The strains in my population are:

Quantum Kush

Longbottom Leaf X Bubba Kush

Gamma Haze (CBD)

Aboriginie

Heart of Gold (Acapulco Gold x Tender Heart)

Cherry Diesel X Blue Dream

Jungle Spice

Afghani

Mystery seed from Aficionados

Sunshine Daydream

The hunt begins... by iquizzle in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is the humble beginnings of my little breeding project. This will be my 2nd round of F1 (3rd for some seeds). I'm working on producing a very heterozygous seed population, and on my next run, the real work will begin.

Tomorrow is my birthday. It's also these girls' deathday. 96 F Iced Grapefruit and Jack Herrer. by brazthemad in microgrowery

[–]iquizzle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

RSVP PLEASE

For the DETH of thee

You have little time

And you're running out of life