yes, you need to do some training asap. Need to clip off some of the axials, control its growth, pin a few branches down. Maybe lay off the nitrogen nutes a bit too.
I just finished trimming, found out it was a bit sad because a branch was falling off halfway cut, should have taken a picture but I may have trimmed too much. I don’t add any nutrients I put it all in the soil to begin with but I did put more coffee grounds than recommended on accident Sent from my iPhone using Grasscity Forum
try to get the plant to stay low and spread out as much as you can. give it a few days between cuts, maybe a week or so.
Your trim job DEFINITELY makes it look and grow better, IMO. Read about LST'ing as well; it will only take ya 10 to 15 minutes to get the basic idea of what ya need to do.....good luck, and nice start
I think I’ve read that before I’ve just didn’t realize trimming was so important until I thought about it, I’ll reread it soon Yay that’s great to hear Sent from my iPhone using Grasscity Forum
There are some major issues with that plant to address before it will put out healthy growth, you may want to detail your setup.
She is sufficiently healthy to keep going strong for sure. There are some things that need to be dialed in before she will be in top form.
That plant is doing what nature taught it to do to maximize fertile seed production. That might not be exactly the same as maximizing yield, but it's probably close. For those of us who don't need a lot of herb, just letting plants grow the way they want is a viable strategy. I think the plant looks fine, and it will likely soon unfurl itself. I grow autos, and if I had that plant I'd be delighted, and wouldn't do anything to it.
I want to comment . These new led panels make super tight plants. You can just raise the light and the plant will stretch more. Instead of looking like a head of cabbage .