New Grower Bubblicious, Blueberry, White Widow, and Cheese!

I agree, leave them in the skeletons. Looking good :drool:
 
those are beautiieeeees so far!
looking good to me (although i'm noob)
best luck, keep it up
i'll vote for pedro! :clap:
 
Hey hey sis. :smokebuds:

Finally not a "bro" anymore! :head:

Anyways, I guess I wasn't too clear with my question. I have 3gal pots I can move the babes to. Would that change your opinion of keeping them where they are now? For the record, that would seriously cut down on space until my room is ready, and would require the purchase of additional soil. There's also the shock factor, how much of a delay are we talking? And same question, considering all of this, do you think the rewards will be worth it?
 
If you have the space for the 3 gal pots I would transplant but not until they grow into the skeleton pots. This will probably take another week or 2, you can almost eliminate shock if your careful :smokebuds:
 
If you have the space for the 3 gal pots I would transplant but not until they grow into the skeleton pots. This will probably take another week or 2, you can almost eliminate shock if your careful :smokebuds:

What he said! :thumbs::thumbs:

3 gallons will be a big upgrade from the 1.25 gallons that they're in.... as much as I hate to recommend it because those skeleton pots are seriously badass! :head:
 
I'm still on the edge with that one. I've seen a couple good/great grows in 1.5 gals, but mine are only 1.25. Anyone think the reward of bigger pots will outweigh the stress of transplanting?
I'm not too sure if there will be a huge difference between growing in a 1.25 gallon pot or a 1.5 gallon, though there might be some. For that small of an increase in volume, it might be better to just let them ride and not risk them going through any transplant shock for this grow. Any shock will delay your harvest date, and it sounds like time is of the essence so you can provide yourself with safe meds.
I'd leave them too.. especially since you're inexperienced and doing this grow for a project. But it also depends on your space... you CAN successfully transplant them without shocking them.

Props on that! Keep the truth alive!

I'll vote for Pedro over a puppet any day. :2cents: brow.gif
:bong:
 
I'd leave them too.. especially since you're inexperienced and doing this grow for a project. But it also depends on your space... you CAN successfully transplant them without shocking them.

Props on that! Keep the truth alive!

I'll vote for Pedro over a puppet any day. :2cents: View attachment 137355
:bong:

I misunderstood her broski, she has 3 gallons that she can go into, not 1.5 gallons.

I think the upgrade in size will be worth it. Transplanting is easy if you're confident and have steady hands, and everyone has to learn it sometime.

Ez, you could always transplant one when the time comes and see how it goes. If you feel comfortable enough, go ahead and transplant the rest of them. If not, no worries at all. You'll still be able to pull a nice haul in the skeleton pots.

:smokebuds:
 
I'd leave them too.. especially since you're inexperienced and doing this grow for a project. But it also depends on your space... you CAN successfully transplant them without shocking them.

Props on that! Keep the truth alive!

I'll vote for Pedro over a puppet any day. :2cents: View attachment 137355
:bong:
I'm not growing for a project, I'm killing two birds with one stone by using my grow as my project. What would I do with a bean stalk in my room anyway? Beans do not make good munchies!
 
Ooo can I chime in too? For the sake of keeping your school project in the safe zone, id do what kindred suggested and do maybe 1 or 2 transfers, see how you do with those and if your comfortable and confident with the transplant do the rest.

That way if you flub up, you still have something to do your paper on :thumbup:

Good luck.
Btw,
Le'subed :p
 
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