HST & Manifolding
Learn how to break apical dominance on purpose and build a cleaner, stronger plant structure. This module covers topping, recovery, symmetry, branch selection, and why manifolding is controlled violence, not random damage.
What is manifolding?
Manifolding is structured high-stress training. You do not just top and hope. You build symmetry on purpose.
HST means you are intentionally stressing the plant through cuts, bends, and structural control. Manifolding is one of the cleanest examples of that.
The goal is to create a balanced plant with even main branches, more uniform tops, and cleaner energy distribution across the canopy.
In plain language: you break the plant’s natural dominance pattern and rebuild it into something more efficient and more controllable.
Done right, manifolding creates order. Done badly, it just creates recovery time and chaos.
Symmetry is the point
You are trying to build equal branch structure, not random extra tops.
Recovery matters
Every major cut needs proper recovery before the next round of training.
Timing controls stress
Too early and the plant is weak. Too late and you slow the whole run down.
Clean structure wins
The aim is a tidy framework that makes later canopy management easier and more even.
What you need
Good cuts. Strong plants. Patience.
Healthy plant
Do not manifold a weak, sick, or stunted plant. HST demands strength.
Clean scissors
Use sharp clean tools so cuts are precise and recovery stays cleaner.
Ties or clips
You will often need gentle tie-downs to hold branches flat and balanced.
Training plan
Know which branches stay and which go before you start cutting like a maniac.
Recovery time
This method punishes impatience. Let the plant recover before stacking more stress.
Step by step system
Hover or tap a stage. The panel updates live and shows the image for that step.