i'am really starting to see the clones as a added value time wiseGot the girls picked for the run went in to flower on the 14th, took multiple clones just in case I find something special. I will post some update pics soon. I transplanted topped and flipped them.. didn't skip a beat filling in the space so far great plants..
So outta the 10 Super Chargers an the 5 Apples and Bananas this is what survived.I’ve been known to eff some chit the eff up.
Good luck @BadddoinSo outta the 10 Super Chargers an the 5 Apples and Bananas this is what survived.
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I had a similar issue the last time I cracked beans. I attribute it to the soil. I bought some cheap soil from Tractor Supply. It said it was “raised bed soil,” whatever that means. It was amended - didn’t need fertilizer for 3 months or something like that. I sifted out all of the big stuff, and mixed it 50/50 with coco. Most beans broke the surface, but keeled over within a couple of days. I really feel terrible about treating @DET—PDX’s gear this way. My inclination was to keep it to myself, but finally decided that breeders couldn’t have too much information.
I had two freebie OG Kush fems I got from somewhere, so I started them in straight coco, a method I’ve had success with.
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They’re kicking ass. So I figured I’d try again.
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48 hours later.
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I have them in coco now. Wish me luck.
@NoWaistedSpace some of these plants you need to keep a eye on a short close node can be male , strechers can be the girls.Last time I checked, I had 1 King's Juice female.
2 x 519 males and 2 x Forbidden Fruit are suspected males by their growth structures.
I might let them go ahead and produce pollen for future breeding.
50 years of this, there are nuances that show me early on.@NoWaistedSpace some of these plants you need to keep a eye on a short close node can be male , strechers can be the girls.
View attachment 117447 Notice how the stipule part of the "axil/node" points toward
the main stem? (female) The bract will have a green speck
to a finger shape. It's barely visible at this point.
The stipules will try and point toward each other along the main stem.
On a male, the stipule points out
and away from the main stem.
The bract will be a yellowish white speck. Much easier to tell a male than a female bract at this stage.
(Note) This is Old Timer Science,
not Gen Z science. lol
Try this technique to estimate early sex of a plant.
There's plenty of other early signs of plant sex besides the ones I've quoted.
Now, there will be plants that try and grow a tiny top in the bract area.
Not sure why this happens. I've never seen it on my older genetics, just the newer genetics.
Is it a sign of "hermi" ancestry, I don't know.
Some just say the plant is healthy, but that makes no sense to me.
Someone needs to break out their "science book" that explains this phenomena.
I'll stick to my belief system until proven otherwise. lol
I get what you are saying. Just showing though the stipules aren't always a tell all sign. The way I see it....a plant will show sex once it's mature enough regardless of flowering or not. Once a plant shows alternating nodes instead of parallel, that's usually when you can sex the plants.This one is already maturing, it's staggering the nodes. I'm talking earlier in the growth stage
than this one. The speck will push the stipule out away from the stem before it shifts and starts staggering.
I wished I had one to show you at the very beginning of the speck forming.
I don't want to confuse you on my explanation.
I'll see if I can find one to show you.