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My new theory is that plants that were bred by outdoor growers know they are outdoor plants. I think they need that seasonal change to stop growing and start finishing. The white pistils mean little. The plants one job is to make seeds and it didn't pollinate so it keeps trying. The consistent climate tells the plant it has time. Pure theory, but it's one I haven't heard before and I see no big flaws.Looking at her would be confusing to me a year ago and I would've most likely harvested her too early. She's still pushing a lot of white pistles.
Man dont feel bad, back b4 interweb days when i began, it took me prolly 3-4 outdoor years to finally get buds that was half way decent..I still have chingos to learn.
agreeMy new theory is that plants that were bred by outdoor growers know they are outdoor plants. I think they need that seasonal change to stop growing and start finishing. The white pistils mean little. The plants one job is to make seeds and it didn't pollinate so it keeps trying. The consistent climate tells the plant it has time. Pure theory, but it's one I haven't heard before and I see no big flaws.
If the pack says 8-9 weeks and you're pushing 11, at some point you make the call.
Except for the fact that if you constantly have new pistillate calyxes popping and they all have brand new trichs with brand new heads and stalks. And they usually hide the progress of the first batch of trichs pretty well.Once the resin stock shrinks to a point, it can no longer support the head. They are done!
When do you start bringing them in?...or you trick them like I do by pulling them inside every night/outside in the sun during the day....they will continue to grow a bit....
What's the sense waiting on white pistils, when you lose a bunch of your previously mature heads from degradation and fall off from wind disturbance or bumped against, knocking them off?Except for the fact that if you constantly have new pistillate calyxes popping and they all have brand new trichs with brand new heads and stalks. And they usually hide the progress of the first batch of trichs pretty well.
Whether it was from a plant being bred outdoors or not - inside plants not wanting to finish is a thing, and it's not strain specific. It's more apparent when you are in a living soil system and not "flushing" and making your plant start to degenerate.
Did you miss the first part of the conversation? Plants that continuously put out new growth and new white pistils INSTEAD of finishing all at once is the whole issue. And you rarely see it on outdoor plants because the weather changes ensure senescence. Indoor there is typically no "trigger" other than you shifted to 12/12.What's the sense waiting on white pistils,
Right, but that's you doing it, not the plant. In living soil I am adding no additional chelated minerals for the plant to suck up. That's is where it's more the plant doing what it wants to do naturally. I have the NPK in the soil via compost and such, but the plant takes what it wants when it wants through microbial action in the rhizoshpere (root zone)Some ppl feed wrong and will have pistils at week 10 popping out from a 8 week strain: Here is what I learned npk is exactly what the plant wants! The first two weeks they want N. The next 4 weeks they want p and last weeks they want k if you feed like that your plants will finish with no white pistils and ripe buds: win- win: Check my
Holy fuck. You do need to run autos if that's the case. Here it all depends on the season. This year I went longer than ever. Took most around Oct 15th but messed with those 7 for another 2 weeks. 3 years ago it snowed 18 inches on Sept 8th...and while I drug them in/out for another 3 weeks////the cold weather sent em into stasis and I saw my first PM ever here...so down they came....end of Sept.When do you start bringing them in?
In my parts I start mid July.
Some plants just don't know when/how to die under 12/12 because of "equatorial" heritage in their genes.Did you miss the first part of the conversation? Plants that continuously put out new growth and new white pistils INSTEAD of finishing all at once is the whole issue. And you rarely see it on outdoor plants because the weather changes ensure senescence. Indoor there is typically no "trigger" other than you shifted to 12/12.
If you have a program to, or manually adjust your lights and temps during flower to simulate autumn, then you are way cooler than me. And growing perpetual that isn't an option unless you have several tents that can be at different stages of the year.
The picture that started this had white pistils still popping later in flower. I have had plants do the same. I have noticed that my stuff from breeders I know grow outdoors are more likely to be those plants, but it's not definitive.
When a cross has an 8-9-week mom and an 8-9 week dad (or reversed mom) you expect the kids to go about 8-9 weeks. You'll get outliers and sport plants, but in general that flower time is not gonna change drastically unless you have a variety of genetic inputs. So when that plant is grown 1st generation indoors - and there is no fall with temperature drops and the continuously shortening day - it is not a wild concept that it would take it a generation to acclimatize. The clones would probably finish fine, or her seeds if pollinated.
Again - I put this out as my THEORY. I have anecdotal facts that led me to the theory, but just saying "BS" is counterproductive and kind of childish.
Think of all of the plants with Skunk #1 in their genetics background and where those landraces came from. White hairs...red hairs...it's all in there and can come out at any time...indoors or out. Fast finishers are drawing on the northern sourced genetics in their background...the longer flowering plants are drawing on the more equatorial/southern traits. I've heard folks claim that subjecting a plant to "cold" (a relative term for where you live...LOL) will make it turn purple. I grow where a warm night is 60F in Summer....and they stay out there until it's freezing/so cold the plant is done. Had 40 plants+ last year out there. Maybe 1/3 of em turned colors. (leaves) The rest stayed green. Very few red hairs anywhere. Lotsa white. Cold as shit at night.Some plants just don't know when/how to die under 12/12 because of "equatorial" heritage in their genes.
Have you asked "coco or hydro" growers if they get white hairs late in flower?
Being an outdoor Bubba I agree.Holy fuck. You do need to run autos if that's the case. Here it all depends on the season. This year I went longer than ever. Took most around Oct 15th but messed with those 7 for another 2 weeks. 3 years ago it snowed 18 inches on Sept 8th...and while I drug them in/out for another 3 weeks////the cold weather sent em into stasis and I saw my first PM ever here...so down they came....end of Sept.