My victoria does that too. I guess it's the plants way of saying "I don't need these any more, I'll put all my energy into flowering".perko8 said:My first year super alpha is yellowing a bit on lower leaves. Seems happy enough up top, plenty of burrs growing into flowers.ImageUploadedByAussie Home Brewer1453504185.206511.jpg
ImageUploadedByAussie Home Brewer1453504263.385405.jpg
That is a shitload of cones on a first year plant.... Blows me out of the water! Il take note of your fertilisers and use them next year...neal32 said:Variety : Smurto Chinook
Medium : Coco
Container : 60L black bin
Nutrients : Maxibloom, Maxigrow
Location : Gold Coast
These are my first year Chinooks from DrSmurto. Is anyone else growing them and could give me their opinion on the aroma/bitterness? They don't seem to be ready to harvest yet (any guesses as to when they will be ready?).
The aroma is atypical of Chinook, which is a good thing for me because Chinook is not one of my favourite hop varieties. For me they smell like passionfruit and tropical fruits.
There is probably over a hundred flowers atm so the yield should be decent.
Also I'm thinking of drying them and then dumping them into a double batch 1.055ish ale, at 5 min with a 30 minute hop stand. I'll aim for around 25-30ibus and dry hopped as well. Something like 80 pils/20 wheat with a split of wlp644 and maybe 1272. I was planning on a wet hop ale but due to the pleasant aroma, I'm going to give them a chance to shine without the flavour notes that wet hopping adds.
Cheers.
My guess is that it is like the coco coir bricks that you can get from the big green shed. If my memory serves me correctly, place it in a bucket of water and watch it expand to ten times its original size. I used it many moons ago mixed through soil to aid in water retention.Matplat said:That is a shitload of cones on a first year plant.... Blows me out of the water! Il take note of your fertilisers and use them next year...
Hang on, what is coco growing medium?
Yeah, google growing in coco. I buy the $2 bricks from Masters. The advantage over soil is that you can adjust the feed and ph exactly how the plant likes it as the coco has no nutrients and is pH neutral. I could've been more on top of it but hops seem pretty forgiving.Matplat said:That is a shitload of cones on a first year plant.... Blows me out of the water! Il take note of your fertilisers and use them next year...
Hang on, what is coco growing medium?
Thanks for this,the mix is somewhat sandy but not overly so, the lower leaves on pretty much all the older bines are sort of yellowing and falling off but I attributed this to a shift in resources to the newer higher leaves. I suppose my main confusion comes from the fact that the other two plants which are in the exact same potting mix are doing much better, but perhaps this is a function of the variety?wide eyed and legless said:The basics of producing healthy plants you need 4 things, sunlight, air, water and nutrients, the roots of a plant need to breathe, so a good potting mix is essential to allow the roots to breathe, the right dosage of nutrients and the right pH to allow the plant to take up the nutrients,not to much water or the growing medium can compact not allowing the roots to breathe.
That potting mix you have there Nizmoose is it sandy? In the pic it looks like it is and the leaves aren't a lush green, could be nitrogen deficient also with the growth as part of the factor could also point to that.
I doubt if you will be getting any bud on that plant this year, I would be trying to source the problem and getting it right for next year, get a cheapish pH meter and some distilled water and check the pH of the medium that is as good a place to start to find the problem with that plant.
Wouldn't have thought it would be that badly off just from being a different variety though. I also have a Hallertau plant, and the other one I have is Fuggle. They are both in exactly the same potting mix with exactly the same nutrients and watering. The Hallertau took off and has had much more growth (and flowering) than the Fuggle, but it's still growing fine and has a few bines up to the top of my 2.5 metre mesh framework setup.Nizmoose said:I suppose my main confusion comes from the fact that the other two plants which are in the exact same potting mix are doing much better, but perhaps this is a function of the variety?
Wort said:Have you changed the soil in the 2nd year plant? Maybe it used up all the good stuff in the first year. I put a half a bag of cow poo and half a bag of chook poo on my plants in the off season to try get the soil ready for the growing season. Mine are in the ground so you might not want that much in each pot.
Mardoo has a really good post around here somewhere with his soil mix for pots and watering schedules and I've used something very similar for my pots that my cuttings go in and also when I'm prepping the ground.
Mardoo's hop potting mix = 2 parts mountain soil, 2 parts mushroom compost, 1 part composted sheep manure, 1 part composted chicken manure, ½ part sand – all from Bunnings. Seems to be working great.
Yeah I wouldnt have thought so either!Rocker1986 said:Wouldn't have thought it would be that badly off just from being a different variety though. I also have a Hallertau plant, and the other one I have is Fuggle. They are both in exactly the same potting mix with exactly the same nutrients and watering. The Hallertau took off and has had much more growth (and flowering) than the Fuggle, but it's still growing fine and has a few bines up to the top of my 2.5 metre mesh framework setup.
Those burs are epic mateDanscraftbeer said:Victoria. Two 1st season rhizomes just starting to flower. Invading into the greenhouse as well.
This tangle mess is one 1st season Chinook rhizolme. The other died or just wimped out this season.
I wanted it to grow more before flowering but it makes up for it in density. This is going heavy on the flowers.
Trusses? Clusters? Bunches? a fluff ball of hops this is going to be. :icon_drool2:
2nd Season Cascade. They haven't started flowering yet. I harvested them late march last year. Growing in wicking beds to become a canopy shade for other vegies that I haven't got around to. The hop roots will spread all through these beds actually. They are cut down IBC tanks, etc
Aquaponics here ya go. I took this little cutting of the Cascade 2 months ago. Planted in the gravel of my Aquaponics system just for kicks. It started growing again after a week. I new it would but didn't expect to get a harvest off it this year etc. Now I am. B)
From this
To this from a cutting I took 2 months ago. More Laterals than long I have to train them all outside the cage it goes everywhere. So it will be close to 4 months from cutting to harvest. :huh:
Cascade was all from little pots I bought from Diggers. Victoria and Chinook was supplied by mail from Dr Smurto.
Cheers. :chug:
Enter your email address to join: