Posted on April 29th, 2008 by kain91
As we discussed above, tall and skinny is not productive under a small light. I grew cannabis initially using this method, based on books and magazines that I read before designing my 250 watt system, and it worked well for many years, yielding just over 1 oz. per ft. Not bad, but it can be so much better.
The clone could just sit there, stretch a bit under the light regime, and flower, producing a tiny little bud with a couple of seeds. But that rarely, if ever, happens. Instead the clone takes off in a rush of growth, forming a woody main stem and branches. If the plant is suitable for sea of green growing, it will stop short of the lights and cannabis flower. Most cannabis indica auction dominated plants stop short enough to be grown using this method. That process is at the heart of the sea of green method, as it results in the smallest possible plant flowering in the quickest possible time.
Each bud cannabis grows up vertically 90 degrees from the stem. You are familiar with how a cola is made up of individual bunches of flowers connected to the stem in an overlapping spiral, producing a structure that looks like a single unit. Marijuana seeds.
Some pot plants growing have brittle stems, and are difficult to train. So long as the canabis seed structures in the cannabis plant that carry fluids arent damaged too much, the shoot will heal and be just fine. It may also be possible to top brittle marijuana plants under the screen, so that the future cannabis growth will be in several, more slender shoots. I have no experience in training a cannabis seeds auction by topping.