The BudTrainer Method™

How to Plant Cannabis: Indoor & Outdoor Setup (2026 Guide)

Cannabis seed held in tweezers on top of the BudCups yellow from BudTrainer, filled with soil, ready to plant

In this article

By Henrique Dias, CEO & Co-founder of BudTrainer
Last updated May 2026 · 17 min read

Quick answer: To plant cannabis, place a germinated seed about 1/4 to 1/2 inch (6-13 mm) deep, taproot down, into pre-moistened growing medium inside a small starter container - not your final pot. Target pH 6.2-6.6 in soil, 5.8-6.2 in coco or PRO-MIX HP, and 5.5-5.8 in rockwool, with EC at or below 0.8 (around 400 ppm) for the first two weeks. Hold root-zone temperature at 75-79°F (24-26°C), relative humidity at 70-80%, and run light at 100-200 PPFD on an 18/6 schedule indoors. Outdoors, wait until nighttime lows are above 50°F (10°C) and harden off seedlings for 10 days before transplanting outside.

Planting is where most home grows quietly fail. The fix is not more nutrients or stronger lights - it is the right medium, the right starter container, the right water chemistry, and the right environment, all dialed in before the seed touches soil. This guide covers indoor and outdoor setups, the five mediums compared, exact pH and EC by medium, mycorrhizal inoculation, the eight most common mistakes, and the planting steps from hole to humidity dome.

NOTE: this guide covers planting for both autoflower and photoperiodic cannabis. Where they differ (mainly transplant timing), we say so.

Hand dropping a cannabis seed onto pre-moistened soil inside a yellow BudCup nursery cup, the first physical step of planting cannabis after germination.

Planting is the step where most home grows quietly fail. Not loudly - the seed sprouts, the cotyledons open, everything looks fine. Then a week in, the seedling stalls, the leaves yellow, and the grower assumes it is a nutrient problem. It is not. It is almost always a planting problem that did not show up until the roots had nowhere to go.

This guide assumes you have already germinated your seed (if not, or if you want to plant directly in soil, start with our how to germinate cannabis seeds guide). From here, the goal is to put that fragile little taproot into the right medium, in the right container, under the right environment - so it can build the root system that everything else depends on, all the way through to harvest.

What you do in the next 30 minutes sets the trajectory for the next 12 weeks. Get the medium, container, water chemistry, and environment right and the seedling almost grows itself. Get any one of them wrong and you will spend the rest of the grow trying to recover.

If you have not picked your strain yet, our how to select cannabis seeds guide is the right starting point. And if you want the full big-picture view of where planting fits in the BudTrainer Method, see the BudTrainer Method overview.

Lastly, if you are planting a batch and need fresh genetics, our friends at Seed Supreme stock feminized and autoflower seeds from most major breeders with discreet shipping to North America - worth a look if you have not picked your strain yet.

Choosing Your Growing Medium

The medium is the single biggest decision you make at planting. It controls how often you water, how much you feed, what your pH targets are, and how forgiving the grow will be when you make mistakes (and you will). Here is how the five main options compare.

Medium pH target Watering frequency Forgiveness Best for
Soil (potting mix) 6.2-6.6 Every 2-4 days High First-time growers, organic-leaning grows
PRO-MIX HP 5.8-6.2 Every 1-3 days Medium-high Most home growers, the BudTrainer default
Coco coir 5.8-6.2 Daily Medium (needs Cal-Mag) Growers who want fast growth and tight feed control
Rockwool 5.5-5.8 Daily / continuous Low Hydroponic setups, advanced growers
Living organic soil 6.2-6.8 (irrelevant) Every 3-5 days Very high Set-and-forget, soil-as-a-system growers
Infographic comparing pH ranges for cannabis growing mediums: soil, PRO-MIX HP, coco coir, rockwool, and living organic soil.

Soil (Potting Mix)

A quality bagged potting mix is the most forgiving option for a first grow. It buffers pH, holds nutrients, and lets you water less often. Look for a peat-based mix with perlite, ideally one labeled for vegetables or seedlings. Avoid Miracle-Gro time-release fertilizer mixes - the slow-release prills can burn young roots.

PRO-MIX HP

Our default at BudTrainer. PRO-MIX HP is a sphagnum peat-perlite mix with high porosity, which means oxygen access at the root zone is excellent and root development is fast. We have found it to be the best balance of forgiveness, performance, and price for home growers. Run it slightly acidic (5.8-6.2) and feed lightly through the seedling stage.

Coco Coir

Coco gives you the fastest growth of the soilless media but demands more attention. You will water daily once the plant is established, you must add Cal-Mag from day one (coco binds calcium and magnesium), and you have less margin for error on pH. If you want to push harder grows and you are willing to learn the feed schedule, coco rewards the effort.

Rockwool

The default in commercial hydroponics. Excellent for high-density grows and continuous-feed systems. Not recommended for first-time home growers - rockwool needs to be pre-soaked at pH 5.5 to neutralize its native pH of around 8.0, and it has zero nutrient buffering, so any feed mistake hits the plant immediately.

Living Organic Soil

A no-till living soil with compost, worm castings, and a healthy microbial population is the most forgiving medium of all once it is established. The biology buffers everything - pH, nutrients, moisture. The trade-off is upfront cost and setup time, plus you cannot freely top-feed bottled nutrients without disrupting the soil web.

For a deeper dive on how the medium choice shapes root architecture, read our cannabis root development science guide.

Choosing Your Starter Container

The container at planting matters as much as the medium. The biggest mistake new growers make is planting straight into a 5-gallon pot because that is what the plant will eventually need. It is also the fastest way to drown a seedling.

A small seedling cannot drink enough water to dry out a large pot. The medium stays saturated for days, oxygen gets pushed out of the root zone, and root growth slows or stops. The plant either rots at the soil line or sits stunted while you guess at what is wrong.

Start small. Move up. The right starter container is roughly 12 to 16 oz (350 to 475 ml) - just enough room for the first 2 to 4 weeks of root growth, and small enough that the medium dries between waterings.

Side-by-side comparison of cannabis seedling starter containers: BudCups, plastic nursery pot, red Solo cup, rockwool cube, and paper peat pot.
Container Volume Drainage Reusable Notes
BudCups 16 oz Triple-drainage bottom plate Yes (dishwasher safe) Designed for shock-free pop-out transplants
Plastic nursery pot 12-16 oz Bottom holes only Yes Cheap, widely available
Red Solo cup (with holes) 16 oz You drill them Once or twice Works in a pinch, no drainage out of the box
Rockwool / Rapid Rooter ~2 oz Open structure No Best for hydroponic transitions
Peat pot 12-16 oz Through walls No (compostable) Plant the whole thing into the next pot - convenient but pots dry out fast

The BudCups exist because every other starter container forces a tradeoff. Plastic nursery pots have weak drainage. Solo cups have no drainage until you drill them. Peat pots dry out in hours. The BudCups were designed with a removable bottom plate that gives you triple-drainage during the seedling stage and a true shock-free pop-out at transplant time. For the full assembly, fill, water, and pop-out walkthrough, see how to use the BudCups.

Water Chemistry: pH and EC for Seedlings

Two numbers matter at planting: pH (how acidic the water is) and EC (how much fertilizer is dissolved in it). Get these right and the seedling can absorb everything the medium has to offer. Get them wrong and you can fertilize all you want - the plant will not see most of it.

Water Type Matters First

  • Distilled or RO water: the cleanest base, lets you control everything you add. Best for any soilless medium.
  • Tap water: usable, but let it sit out 24 hours to dechlorinate. Test the EC first - hard water can already be at 0.4-0.6 EC before you add anything.
  • Softened water: never. The salts used in water softeners are toxic to plants over time.
  • Rainwater: excellent if you have a clean catch system, near-zero EC and roughly neutral pH.

EC (or PPM) for Seedlings

Seedlings come pre-loaded with about 7 to 14 days worth of nutrients in the seed itself. They do not need a heavy feed at planting. We have found that an EC of 0.6 to 0.8 (roughly 300-400 ppm on the 500 scale) is the sweet spot for the first two weeks.3 If your starting water already sits at 0.4-0.5 EC, do not add fertilizer for the first week. If you are on RO or distilled, add just enough vegetative-stage nutrient to bring you to 0.8 EC.

pH Targets by Medium

Once your EC is set, measure pH and adjust with pH Up or pH Down (food-grade vinegar and a small pinch of baking soda also work for first-time growers without dedicated solutions). Target by medium:

  • Soil: 6.2 to 6.6
  • PRO-MIX HP: 5.8 to 6.2
  • Coco coir: 5.8 to 6.2
  • Rockwool / DWC: 5.5 to 5.8
  • Living organic soil: water in the 6.2 to 7.0 range and let the soil biology buffer the rest

Pre-moisten the medium with this prepared water before you plant the seed. Watering after planting risks washing the seed deeper than you wanted or floating it to the surface.

How to Plant the Germinated Seed

If you ran a hydrogen peroxide pre-soak before germinating (covered in our germination guide), proceed exactly the same way from here - the planting steps are identical.

This is the moment everything you have set up so far comes together. The seed has cracked, the white taproot is in the 5-13 mm window, the medium is in the cup, the cup is pre-moistened, and the pH and EC are dialed. Now you move the seed into the soil without snapping the root or burying it wrong.

The whole process takes about 60 seconds per seed. Go slow anyway. A torn root hair here costs you a week of growth later.

What You Need on the Table

  • Your germinated seed (taproot 5-13 mm long, bright white)
  • The pre-filled, pre-moistened starter container
  • Thin-tipped tweezers (we use the CannaKan Huggers tweezers, which are made for grabbing germinated seeds without damaging them)
  • A spray bottle with your prepared water
  • A clear plastic dome or inverted transparent cup

Step 1 - Make the Hole

Use the toothpick or pencil to poke a hole in the center of the medium, 1/4 to 1/2 inch (6-13 mm) deep. The hole should be just wide enough to drop the seed into without scraping the sides.

Too shallow (under 1/4 inch) and the seed dries out, or it pushes its shell up with the cotyledons and ends up with "helmet head" (where the seed shell stays stuck on the cotyledons as they emerge). Too deep (over 1/2 inch) and the seedling burns through its seed reserves before it ever reaches the surface.

Step 1 of planting cannabis: hand making a 1/4 inch deep hole in pre-moistened soil with the tip of a pair of tweezers.

Step 2 - Pick Up the Seed

Use the tweezers to grip the seed by the shell only. Never touch the white taproot or the root hairs along it. Those hairs are single-cell extensions and they tear if you so much as brush them with your fingers.

If the seed is still on a paper towel and the taproot has anchored into the towel, do not pull. Tear away the surrounding paper with the seed still attached and place the whole piece into the hole. The towel breaks down in a few days.

Step 2 of planting cannabis: hand holding a germinated cannabis seed with thin-tipped tweezers, gripping by the shell only to protect the white taproot.

Step 3 - Place the Seed Taproot Down

Lower the seed into the hole with the white taproot pointing straight down and the rounded crown facing up. The taproot is the part that becomes the main downward root - it needs to point in the direction it is already trying to grow.

Step 3 of planting cannabis: a germinated cannabis seed with the white taproot pointing down, ready to drop into the prepared planting hole.

If you place the seed sideways or with the taproot pointing up, the seedling wastes 24 to 48 hours reorienting itself underground before it can push above the surface. You will see weaker, slower growth in the first two weeks.

If you cannot tell which end the taproot is on (sometimes it is just barely cracked through), drop the seed in flat with the cracked side down. Cannabis seedlings have positive gravitropism in the root and negative gravitropism in the shoot - the radicle finds down on its own. It is not as clean as a perfectly oriented seed, but it works.

Step 4 - Cover the Seed

Pinch a small amount of loose, dry medium from the surface and sprinkle it over the seed until the hole is filled and the surface is level. Do not pack it down. Do not press the medium with your finger. Young roots need air pockets to grow into - compaction is one of the easiest ways to stall a seedling before it ever breaks the surface.

Step 4 of planting cannabis: hand sprinkling loose soil over a freshly planted cannabis seed, covering the planting hole without pressing the medium down.

Step 5 - Mist the Surface (Do Not Water)

Take the spray bottle and give the surface 2 or 3 light mists - just enough to settle the loose medium you sprinkled on top. The seed itself does not need more water. The medium underneath is already moist from the pre-soaking, and that is where the taproot is going.

Watering at this point - actually pouring water in - can wash the seed deeper than you wanted, float it back to the surface, or compact the medium around it. Resist the urge.

Step 5 of planting cannabis: hand misting the soil surface above a freshly planted cannabis seed to settle the loose top layer without disturbing the seed.

Step 6 - Cover with the Dome

Place the clear plastic dome (or inverted transparent cup) over the planted seed to lock in humidity at 70-80%. If you are using an inverted cup, cut two small slits in the top to vent stale air. Position the cup or dome so it does not touch the surface of the medium.

Step 6 of planting cannabis: clear inverted plastic cup placed over a yellow BudCup as an improvised humidity dome, with two small vent slits cut in the top.

Now leave the seed alone. Do not check it every hour. The cotyledons will break the surface in 2 to 7 days depending on medium temperature and how deep you planted. Your job between now and then is to hold the environment steady, not to dig up the seed to see if anything is happening.

Direct-Sowing an Un-Germinated Seed

Hand placing a cannabis seed into a yellow BudCup filled with pre-moistened soil, demonstrating the direct-sow planting method as an alternative to paper-towel germination.

The steps above assume you germinated first (paper towel, glass of water, etc.) and are moving a seed with a visible taproot into soil. If you want to skip the germination tray and put the un-germinated seed straight into the medium, that is the direct-planting method - covered in full in our germination guide. Same hole depth, same pointy-end-down rule, same dome on top. The only difference is you wait a few extra days for the seed to crack and emerge.

Indoor Planting Setup

Indoors, you have full control over the environment - which is exactly the problem. There are five things to dial in: light, temperature, humidity, airflow, and root-zone warmth. Get them all in the right window and you will have a healthy seedling in 7 days. Miss any one badly and the plant tells you about it.

Light

Seedlings do not need much light, and they hate too much of it. Aim for 100-200 PPFD at canopy level for the first two weeks, then ramp to 200-400 PPFD in weeks 3 and 4.2 If you do not own a PAR meter, a free phone-based lux app gets you close - target around 8,000-16,000 lux at the canopy. Run an 18 hours on / 6 hours off schedule for both photoperiod and autoflower seedlings (some growers run autos at 20/4 or 24/0; we prefer 18/6 because the dark period helps the plant build root mass).

Keep the light at least 24 inches above seedlings if you are using a 100-watt-class LED, further for higher-wattage fixtures. If your seedlings are stretching tall and skinny, the light is too far away or too weak. If the cotyledons are curling or bleaching, it is too close or too strong.4

Temperature and Root-Zone Warmth

Air temperature should sit at 72-78°F (22-26°C) with lights on, and not drop below 65°F (18°C) with lights off. Root-zone temperature is the more important number - aim for 75-79°F (24-26°C) at the medium. A seedling heat mat with a thermostat handles this in any room that runs cool. Without a thermostat, cheap heat mats run as hot as 95°F (35°C) and will cook your roots, so always test with a probe before relying on one.

Humidity

Seedlings want 70-80% relative humidity in the first two weeks, dropping to 60-70% in weeks 3 and 4. A clear plastic humidity dome over the tray (or a transparent cup inverted over a single plant) handles this on its own. Crack the vents on the dome once a day to let stale air out, and remove the dome entirely once the seedling's leaves touch the sides or week 1 is done, whichever comes first.

Airflow

One small clip-on oscillating fan, lowest speed, pointed across the tent (not directly at the seedlings) does two things: it strengthens the stems through gentle stress, and it keeps stagnant humid air from sitting on the leaves. Stagnant air is the breeding ground for the most common seedling killer.

Monitoring

A $15 thermometer-hygrometer placed at canopy level (not on the floor of the tent) tells you in one glance whether your environment is in range. Anything you do not measure, you cannot control.

Cannabis seedling propagator infographic showing the four indoor environment requirements: light at 100-200 PPFD, root-zone warmth at 75-79°F, indirect airflow, and humidity at 70-80%.

Outdoor Planting Setup

Outdoors, the environment is mostly out of your hands. The job becomes timing - planting at the right point in the season - and preparing the seedling so it does not melt the moment it leaves your kitchen.

When to Plant Outdoors

The rule everyone gets wrong: do not plant by the calendar, plant by the night-time low. Cannabis seedlings start suffering when nighttime temperatures drop below 50°F (10°C), and a single frost will kill them outright.1

  • Northern Hemisphere: typically late April through early June, depending on USDA zone. Zones 3-5 wait until late May. Zones 7-9 can usually go in early May.
  • Southern Hemisphere: typically late October through early December.

Check your local last-frost date and add 7 days for safety. Then check the 10-day forecast before you commit a seedling outside.

Hardening Off (Non-Negotiable)

A seedling raised under a soft 200 PPFD LED in 75°F air will get sunburned within an hour of full midday sun. Hardening off is the 10-day acclimation period that prevents this.

  1. Days 1-2: place the seedling outside in shade for 2 hours, then bring it back inside.
  2. Days 3-4: 4 hours in shade, with brief (30 min) exposure to morning sun.
  3. Days 5-7: 6 hours outside, including 2-3 hours of direct sun, brought in only at night.
  4. Days 8-10: full days outside, brought in only if nights drop near 50°F.
Cannabis seedling hardening off in a yellow BudCup placed on a wooden surface, transitioning from indoor LED light to outdoor sun exposure.

By day 10 the seedling has built UV protection, thicker cuticles, and stronger stems. Now it can go in the ground or in its outdoor container.

Soil Prep for In-Ground Planting

If you are planting straight into native soil, dig a hole at least 1 cubic foot, mix the native soil 50/50 with quality compost or aged manure, and add a small handful of slow-release organic fertilizer (an all-purpose 4-4-4 works fine). For heavy clay, double the compost ratio and add perlite. For sandy soil, double the compost and add a moisture-retentive component like coco coir.

Containers vs. In-Ground Outdoors

Containers (5 to 25 gallon fabric pots like the BudPots) give you mobility, easier pest control, and the ability to move plants if a heat dome or storm rolls in. In-ground plants get bigger, need less watering, and produce more yield, but you are committed to the spot you pick. For a deep dive on the in-ground approach, see how to grow massive cannabis plants outdoors.

Large outdoor cannabis plants thriving with BudTrainer training techniques for maximum bud production and healthy garden growth.

Pests and Animals

Outdoor seedlings are food for slugs, snails, deer, rabbits, and grasshoppers. A simple hardware-cloth cage (4-5 ft wire mesh) around each plant for the first 3 weeks solves about 90% of the problem. Diatomaceous earth around the base handles slugs.

Mycorrhizal Fungi at Planting

Mycorrhizal fungi form a symbiotic relationship with cannabis roots, dramatically expanding the effective root surface area in exchange for a small share of the plant's sugars.6 Inoculating at planting is the easiest time to do it - the fungi colonize the root zone as the plant grows into it.

Sprinkle a pinch of granular inoculant (PRO-MIX CONNECT, Great White, or Mykos all work well) directly into the planting hole, in contact with the medium where the roots will grow. That is it. We cover the why and the science in our transplanting guide, where mycorrhizae get even more important.

Optional planting step: hand sprinkling granular mycorrhizal fungi inoculant onto pre-moistened soil inside a yellow BudCup to boost cannabis seedling root growth.

How to Fix Lanky Seedlings

If your seedling stretches tall and skinny within the first week, the light is too weak or too far away. The plant is doing what cannabis does in low light: reaching for it. Two fixes, applied together:

  1. Lower the light or turn it up. Drop a 100W LED to 18 inches, or boost intensity by 25%. Watch leaf color over the next 48 hours - if cotyledons stay green, you are in the right zone.
  2. Stake the stem. A lanky stem cannot hold up the cotyledons or the first true leaves. Use a 3-4 inch piece of BudHuggers as a soft stake. Push one end into the medium next to the stem, then bend the top into a loose ring around the stem to hold it upright. The soft rubber coating means no abrasion as the stem thickens.
Lanky cannabis seedling supported upright with a piece of BudHuggers training wire bent into a ring inside a yellow BudCup.

Once the plant straightens up and starts producing wider leaves under stronger light, the BudHuggers come out and the plant supports itself.

How to Avoid Common Planting Mistakes

These are the mistakes we see kill 80% of first-grow seedlings. None of them are obvious in the moment. All of them are obvious in hindsight. Each one shows up a week or two later as a stalled plant, weak roots, or in worst cases a dead seedling that takes a month off your timeline before harvest.

Planting in the Final Pot

The 5-gallon pot is not your friend. Not yet, anyway. A seedling in a 5-gallon pot cannot dry the medium in any reasonable timeframe, oxygen leaves the root zone, and roots either rot or refuse to grow. Start in a 12-16 oz container, transplant up when the roots fill it. The full transplant ladder, including the 3-to-5x volume rule, is in our how to transplant cannabis guide.

Overwatering

Most "deficiency" symptoms in seedlings are overwatering symptoms in disguise. Yellow leaves, droopy posture, slow growth - all classic signs of a root system that cannot breathe. Water once at planting (until you see runoff from the drainage holes), then leave the seedling alone for 7 to 10 days. The cup should feel light before you water again.

Wrong pH

If your water is at pH 7.5 and you are planting into PRO-MIX HP, the medium will lock out iron, manganese, zinc, and phosphorus before the plant ever touches it.5 Cheap pH meters drift; calibrate every couple of weeks.

Cold Floor Syndrome

Setting your seedling tray on a cold tile or concrete floor pulls the root-zone temperature down by 8-10°F. The plant looks fine for a week, then stalls. Either elevate the tray on a wood block or use a heat mat with a thermostat.

Hot, Cheap Heat Mat

The opposite problem. Many sub-$15 heat mats run at 95°F+ with no thermostat. That cooks the roots. If your mat does not have a thermostat, buy a $20 inline thermostat or just put a folded towel between the mat and the tray to dampen the heat.

No Airflow

A still grow tent with a seedling under a humidity dome is a petri dish. One small clip-on fan on lowest speed, pointed across (not at) the seedlings, prevents most fungal problems.

Planting Outdoors Too Early

The forecast says 65°F and sunny. You plant. Two nights later it drops to 38°F and the seedling is dead. Wait until nighttime lows are consistently above 50°F, and harden off for 10 days before committing.

Skipping Hardening Off

Indoor LED light is gentle. Midday sun in June is not. A non-hardened seedling can sunburn fatally in under an hour outside. The 10-day hardening period is the single highest-leverage thing you can do for outdoor success.

Touching the Taproot

The white root hairs are extremely fragile. Use tweezers or clean fingers, hold the seed by the shell only, and never touch the root surface. For full taproot handling at the germination-to-planting transition, see our germination guide.

Next Steps After Planting

Once the seedling is in the medium, watered, and under the right environment, give it 7 days mostly undisturbed. Check on it morning and night. Look for the cotyledons opening, then the first true serrated leaves between them. If you see those by day 7, you are on track.

From here, the next milestone is the first transplant. Roots typically fill a 16 oz starter cup in 2 to 4 weeks - faster on autoflowers, slower on indica-dominant photos. When you see roots starting to circle the bottom or shoot out the drainage holes, it is time to move up to a 1-gallon to 5-gallon pot. Read our full how to transplant cannabis guide for the step-by-step.

Person lifting a cannabis seedling with intact white root ball out of a yellow BudCup nursery cup, ready to transplant into a larger fabric pot.

Once the plant is established in its new pot and showing the 5th node, the BudTrainer Method kicks in. Topping doubles your bud sites, then low-stress training with BudClips spreads the canopy flat for maximum light penetration. That is where serious yield comes from. For the deeper read on how a flat trained canopy converts light into bud, see our canopy development science guide.

For the full overview of where this all fits together, see the BudTrainer Method.

Frequently Asked Questions

How deep should I plant a cannabis seed or seedling?

Plant about 1/4 to 1/2 inch (6-13 mm) deep. For a germinated seed, orient the white taproot pointing down. Too shallow and the seed dries out or pushes its shell up with the cotyledons. Too deep and the seedling exhausts its seed reserves trying to reach the surface.

What is the best growing medium for first-time cannabis growers?

PRO-MIX HP or a quality bagged potting soil. Both buffer pH, hold nutrients, and forgive watering mistakes. PRO-MIX HP grows plants slightly faster because of its high porosity. Avoid coco coir for your first grow unless you are committed to learning the daily feed schedule and Cal-Mag requirement.

What pH should water be at planting?

It depends on your medium. Soil: 6.2 to 6.6. PRO-MIX HP and coco coir: 5.8 to 6.2. Rockwool and DWC hydroponics: 5.5 to 5.8. Living organic soil: 6.2 to 7.0 - the soil biology buffers the rest. Always pH-adjust your water after mixing in nutrients, not before.

How much should I feed a cannabis seedling at planting?

Very little. Seedlings have 7-14 days of nutrients stored inside the seed. Target an EC of 0.6 to 0.8 (about 300-400 ppm on the 500 scale) for the first two weeks. If your tap water already sits above 0.4 EC, you can skip nutrients for the first week.

What temperature do cannabis seedlings need?

Air temperature: 72-78°F (22-26°C) with lights on, no lower than 65°F (18°C) with lights off. Root-zone temperature is the more important number - aim for 75-79°F (24-26°C) at the medium. Use a seedling heat mat with a thermostat in any room that runs cool.

What humidity do cannabis seedlings need?

70-80% relative humidity in the first two weeks, dropping to 60-70% in weeks 3 and 4. A simple humidity dome or inverted clear plastic cup achieves this with no electronics. Crack the dome vents daily to let stale air out.

How much light does a cannabis seedling need?

100-200 PPFD at canopy level for the first two weeks, then ramp to 200-400 PPFD in weeks 3 and 4. Run an 18 hours on / 6 hours off schedule for both photoperiod and autoflower seedlings. Keep the fixture at least 24 inches above the seedlings if you are using a 100-watt-class LED.

Can I plant a cannabis seed straight outdoors?

You can, but survival rates are lower than starting indoors and hardening off. Direct-sowing outdoors has a higher temperature bar than transplanting a hardened-off seedling because the seed and emerging radicle are more vulnerable to cold swings. Only direct-sow once nighttime lows are consistently above 55°F (13°C), and cover the soil with a mini-cloche or mason jar for the first week to maintain humidity and protect from pests.

Should I water immediately after planting?

No. Pre-moisten the medium before you plant the seed. Watering after planting can wash the seed deeper than you wanted or float it to the surface. After the initial pre-moistening, do not water again until the cup feels noticeably lighter - usually 7 to 10 days.

Why is my seedling stretched and falling over?

Light is too weak or too far away. The plant is reaching for it. Lower the fixture or increase intensity, and stake the stem with a piece of training wire (we use BudHuggers) to keep the seedling upright while it strengthens.

Do I need a humidity dome to plant cannabis?

No, but it makes the first 7-10 days much easier. A clear plastic dome (or a transparent cup inverted over a single plant) keeps humidity in the 70-80% range automatically. Without one, you will need to mist the surface 1-2 times a day.

When can I move my seedling outside?

After hardening off for 10 days, and only once nighttime lows are consistently above 50°F (10°C). Skipping the hardening period - even with the right temperatures - usually results in fatal sunburn within hours of full sun exposure.

Where to Go From Here

Planting is one stage in a system. The full BudTrainer Method runs: seed selectiongermination → planting (you are here) → transplantingtoppinglow-stress trainingdefoliatingharvestingdryingtrimmingcuring.

If you are using the BudCups as your starter container, the how to use the BudCups guide covers the assembly, fill, water, and pop-out specifics. Otherwise, your next read should be how to transplant cannabis, which picks up exactly where this guide ends.

References

  1. Campiglia, E., Gobbi, L., & Marucci, A. (2022). Temperature Limits for Seed Germination in Industrial Hemp (Cannabis sativa L.). Crops, 2(4), 415-427. https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7655/2/4/29
  2. Chandra, S., Lata, H., Khan, I. A., & ElSohly, M. A. (2008). Photosynthetic response of Cannabis sativa L. to variations in photosynthetic photon flux densities, temperature and CO2 conditions. Physiology and Molecular Biology of Plants, 14(4), 299-306. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23572895/
  3. Caplan, D., Dixon, M., & Zheng, Y. (2017). Optimal Rate of Organic Fertilizer during the Vegetative-stage for Cannabis Grown in Two Coir-based Substrates. HortScience, 52(9), 1307-1312. https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/52/9/article-p1307.xml
  4. Rodriguez-Morrison, V., Llewellyn, D., & Zheng, Y. (2021). Cannabis Yield, Potency, and Leaf Photosynthesis Respond Differently to Increasing Light Levels in an Indoor Environment. Frontiers in Plant Science, 12, 646020. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2021.646020/full
  5. Bernstein, N., Gorelick, J., Zerahia, R., & Koch, S. (2019). Impact of N, P, K, and Humic Acid Supplementation on the Chemical Profile of Medical Cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.). Frontiers in Plant Science, 10, 736. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2019.00736/full
  6. Conant, R. T., Walsh, R. P., Walsh, M., Bell, C. W., & Wallenstein, M. D. (2017). Effects of a Microbial Biostimulant, Mammoth PTM, on Cannabis sativa Bud Yield. Journal of Horticulture, 4(1). https://www.hilarispublisher.com/open-access/effects-of-a-microbial-biostimulant-mammoth-ptm-on-cannabis-sativa-bud-yield-2376-0354-1000191.pdf
Henrique Dias, CEO and co-founder of BudTrainer.

About the Author

Henrique Dias is the CEO and co-founder of BudTrainer. He is a mechanical engineer who also holds a graduate certificate in Commercial Cannabis Production from Niagara College in Ontario, Canada - the first college-level cannabis cultivation program in North America. Before founding BudTrainer, Henrique worked with Health Canada licensed cannabis producers, where he gained hands-on experience in cultivation, processing, and post-harvest management of cannabis at commercial scale. He started BudTrainer to bring that same level of craft to home growers through better-designed gardening tools and clear, science-backed education.

DISCLAIMER: Everything taught and sold by BudTrainer® is to be used strictly for legal purposes. We do not endorse the production of illegal substances and it is your duty to ensure that you are complying with the law. The words "hemp," "cannabis," "weed," and "marijuana" are used interchangeably to refer to the same plant (legal hemp with less than 0.3% THC) for the purposes of this lesson.

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