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Mimosa Cherry Kush

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27
915
10 months ago
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4000K, 3000lm Light Emitting Diodes/32W
4000K, 3000lm
4000K, 3000lm Light Emitting Diodes/35W
4000K, 3000lm
5000K, 1800lm Light Emitting Diodes/15W
5000K, 1800lm
55"x24"x29"
Custom
Indoor
Room Type
Topping
weeks 4
Defoliation
weeks 4-11
Soil
Grow medium
26 L
Pot Size
0
Germination
a year ago
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
Mimosa Cherry Kush from Dutchfem. As will always be the case, we will be using our own soil blend, conforming to the practice of "just add tap water". With a cozy medium and a practiced technique, we will expect the best. Specifically sowed into the soil is: 2x Mimosa Cherry Kush (feminized) Parental lineage: Purple Afghani x OG Kush x Mimosa More information on this cultivar can be found here: https://www.dutchfem.com/buy/mimosa-cherry-kush/ Only 1 of 2 survived germination. The other dampened off at our own wrong-doing.
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Used method
Directly In Substrate
Germination Method
1
Week 1. Vegetation
a year ago
2.54 cm
19 hrs
28 °C
No Smell
70 %
30 °C
23 °C
0 L
15.24 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
The growth has begun for this little one. She sits in a half solo cup, inside our humidity chamber, inside our climate-controlled grow box, with a few low-wattage LED bars.
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2
Week 2. Vegetation
a year ago
10.16 cm
19 hrs
28 °C
No Smell
55 %
27 °C
24 °C
1 L
30.48 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
This girl is doing quite fine. We transplanted her into a 1L plastic pot this week.
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3
Week 3. Vegetation
a year ago
10.16 cm
19 hrs
28 °C
No Smell
55 %
27 °C
24 °C
1 L
30.48 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
Well, things are starting to look better this week with some nice growth now that the roots are more situated. In a day or two (next week), we'll be topping at least the larger one.
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4
Week 4. Vegetation
a year ago
15.24 cm
19 hrs
26 °C
No Smell
57 %
26 °C
22 °C
26 L
50.8 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
Week 4 is gone. We topped her mid-week, and transplanted her into a 7-gallon fabric pot, in a different grow room under a better light.
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Used techniques
Topping
Technique
Defoliation
Technique
5
Week 5. Vegetation
a year ago
22.86 cm
19 hrs
24 °C
No Smell
58 %
26 °C
22 °C
26 L
50.8 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
She is doing fine. I think our best performer here so far, with great morphology. We expect her to bush out quite a bit by next week.
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
6
Week 6. Vegetation
a year ago
40.64 cm
18 hrs
24 °C
No Smell
58 %
24 °C
22 °C
26 L
45.72 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
She just got a nice compost tea application early this week and we are starting to see the soil come alive with weeds and mushrooms. She is also much more bulkier as promised. This was her last week vegetating and we are now changing her photoperiod to initiate the blooming process.
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
7
Week 7. Flowering
a year ago
43.18 cm
11 hrs
25 °C
No Smell
56 %
24 °C
23 °C
26 L
50.8 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
What a wonderful first week of flowering! This tent is flowering under 11/13 instead of 12/12. We did this for a few reasons, but most the most notable reason is it is a way to control the stretch, and to finish quicker. We're worried about humidity, being our largest tent fill up yet, and the Spring weather starting to get awfully humid this week. Time to turn on the dehumidifier in the lung room, apply our foliar IPM as per protocol, and hope for the best! This cultivar is a bush!
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
8
Week 8. Flowering
a year ago
50.8 cm
11 hrs
26 °C
No Smell
56 %
24 °C
22 °C
26 L
45.72 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
We stopped defoliating everything in this tent earlier this week. It's a jungle in there. We never grew in a full tent-sized raised bed before, so this is quite interesting to watch them all grow together, fighting for the light. Just letting this one grow naturally until the finish line, adding water as needed, along with our weekly organic foliar spray to prevent fungus.
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
9
Week 9. Flowering
a year ago
66.04 cm
11 hrs
26 °C
No Smell
56 %
24 °C
22 °C
26 L
45.72 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
Massive defoliation/lollipopping out of PM fear and more waiting.
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
10
Week 10. Flowering
a year ago
86.36 cm
11 hrs
26 °C
Weak
55 %
24 °C
23 °C
26 L
38.1 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
Week 4 of flower is complete, even though we missed the last 2 days for photographs -- sorry about that. So now that we're about half way to the finish line, here's some information about this grow that we haven't shared here yet, or in any other diary of this tent. There are 6 plants here, and because we've been busy with two other tents and other tasks, our descriptions have been short. So, hidden in this week of one of 6 diaries, and some of it pertains to other tents in other diaries too: The cultivars: - The tent in this grow has 6 plants - 4 plants are from the same breeder, Dutchfem - 2 of these Dutchfem plants are the same cultivar, but not this one -- they'd be my Casey's Rollex O.G. diary. Go check these other diaries out if you want to see more angles of this tent through the growing process. - 1 plant is a tester from a friend of mine; that's the Cognac MAC diary. - 1 plant is from Kannabia, the Kaboom The ages: Actually, each of the separate 3 breeders' plants were started at different times, so even though we flipped them all to flower at the same time, some of them were more mature than others. For the actual age in days, we post that number next to every photo for each week, so go check out the other diaries for specifics, but from oldest to youngest we have: - Cognac MAC (2 days older than the next) - The 4 Dutchfem plants (3 days older than the next) - Kaboom, the youngest of them all. So, they are all approximately the same age, but some needed to veg more, and some were not even planning on being flowered until a last minute decision. The double trouble: Early in flower, we had a major problem present itself at the worst opportunity. Humidity. It has been roughly 20-40% RH in our climate all winter, until one day at the end of their first week of flowering, Spring decided to tease us as usual, and we got a whole week of really warm and humid (80-95% RH) weather. This normally wouldn't have been a problem, as each of our tents is equipped with 4 different hygrometers that transmit data to control fan speeds and other appliances, such as a large dehumidifier in our lung room that has not been on in a while. Unfortunately, on the very same day, 3 out of 4 of these sensors' batteries decided to fully deplete. They lasted 6 months, and we changed out some, but, well, not these for some reason. We also had no alert setup for the fact. The end result was our flowering tent was taking samples at a very high and very warm point in the tent, that we used to average with the other sensors' readings. That ultimately resulted in about a day and a half of the tent being 70-75% RH consistently, even though our readings were normal, and therefor no switching of appliances occurred. We got PM on Kaboom. Quite a bit. We got sad. Quite a bit. We also dealt with PM a lot before and have a few new weapons that have worked well to prevent it, so we decided to go overkill with it. One such thing is we spray once or twice per week, our plants with an organic foliar spray that mostly consists of citrus and lactose. A lot of citrus products will bleach burn plants if applied heavily, and, we've even killed some that were unable to photosynthesize because of the fact. But, not with this product. This product is mixed just perfectly in such a way that it is designed to be applied just before lights out, when it can't evaporate, and vigorously, until the leaves are drenched from all angles, and there is runoff onto the ground. This process takes about 10 minutes using a very fine misting gun (manual hand pump -- they're cheap and highly recommended for most soluble liquid applications). So, we did this not once or twice per week as usual, which usually does prevent the mold in our highly humid environment when things go sideways like has occurred. Instead, we have been applying it twice per day, since the start of the second week of flower. We have also been manually and gently scrubbing leaves we did not want to prune with hydrogen peroxide using a moist paper towel, every time we saw more PM appear. The spray works wonders. PM will take over a crop very quickly. With our overkill spraying application, we didn't even wipe any leaves down with hydrogen peroxide for the first week. We just sprayed and watched the mold disppear (also now with a more correct air environment). We knew we would not have been able to fully get rid of the mold with just spraying though, as the tent was quite a jungle in that first week of flower. There were lots of humidity zones that shouldn't have been. We went overkill here too. We are going to lose a lot in weight, but we do not ever aim for a nice return, just a good sample of medicine, and onto the next. The 2nd week of flower we removed about 50% of foliage, and, by the end of that week we did it again by about the same amount that had grown back, along with lollipopping them more than we would have ever done before, including removing lots of lateral branches. We needed that airflow for the 3 fans in the tent to do their job, and for our bi-daily spraying to reach EVERYTHING. By the 3rd week of flower, there was no mold ever to be seen again, even though it spread from Kaboom to every plant in the tent in just a day. This fourth week, we still continue to spray just as much, because, well, this is an organic product that doesn't leave any oily residue, and is designed to be used on flower. It rains outside, doesn't it? We have beautifully green leaves throughout the tent, and everything looks to be maturing quite nicely. This problem was unavoidable, and we were sad for a couple weeks, but things are looking good now. Another reason for this problem is because of that oddball Cognac MAC, the tester. It was the smallest plant we ever flipped. It just would not respond to being topped at all, and sat doing seemingly nothing for 2 weeks. We considered killing it, but, due to our choice of pots in the tent, we decided to let it go. We are using 2x 21gal raised beds, with 2 dividers in each, effectively making them 2 long sets of 3 7-gallon plants we can grab by the handle and drag out of the tent easily to do our dirty work, assuming we properly let the soil dry out first. Those things are quite the tug when moist. Anyway, this tiny Cognac MAC was just waiting for that photoperiod flip, and it quickly grew many times its height, and much taller than any other plant in the tent. It currently sits mere inches from the light which is raised to the ceiling, yet still stretching at the end of week 4. This plant sort of took over the whole tent, and her and Kaboom are where the most defoliation and pruning took place. Finally, one last thing we did, or rather, did not do, to help against mold was adjust our watering ritual slightly. If you look at any picture, you may see that while these are 7-gal pots each plant sits in, they are only 5.5-6gal full. We were planning on top-dressing, and then mulching, but we decided against that for several reasons. It may have helped and it may not have, but here was the logic: - We didn't want to bring in any other organic material, just to not have to deal with pests, or possible other fungus/disease. - The tent was a jungle and the lighter pots helped us be able to drag them out. Mulches main purposes are to keep moisture in longer, and heat in at night, maintaining a more consistent environment. They also add organic material to propagate the nitrogen cycle. We needed lighter pots, not more water. - Which brings us to water. We needed less of it. Not because we were overwatering, but because our rule of thumb is less is always more. To put it another way, instead of hawk-eyeing the soil and testing its moisture, we instead have always preferred to water a lot when dry (enough), rather than a little when it's not wet (enough). We water a lot infrequently, rather than a little frequently. It has been one way we have seen improvements in the prevention of fungus growth, and I just think it gets those roots stretching out looking for moisture, while pulling vital nutrients from foliage to where needed, if needed. It's okay to see leaf symptoms sometimes for us; iinfact, we sometimes strategically leave large leaves that would have otherwise been defoliated, just to give some more phosphorus to flowers during the late bloom, or, if nature says there isn't enough rain (or human error misses a day or two), then the plant will still be happy receiving nutrition it needs. These plants are resilient, and by looking at leaves, we can tell how well our soil is working. Since during this grow we defoliated an enormous amount, and have been keeping an eye on VPD, every leaf in the whole tent looks green and beautiful. Basically, we didn't keep the leaves we normally would incase of a missed day of watering, but still, they are perfectly green with our longer dry spells. I think that says good things both about the soil we use and the genetics we chose. Ok, from not writing enough in diaries to that wall of text nobody will read, we can now say we are caught up. In the future, we should not try to grow so many uncertain-performing cultivars in the same enclosure. Anyway, most of these cultivars finish at about 9-10 weeks of flower, so see ya at the finish line!
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
11
Week 11. Flowering
a year ago
88.9 cm
11 hrs
27 °C
Normal
53 %
26 °C
24 °C
26 L
25.4 cm
Nutrients 1
Water 1000 mll
It's hard to believe we are one with 5 weeks of bloom here. These entries are usually short and sweet because growing organically is too easy, not having to worry about nutrients and other maintenance tasks. Indeed, all we did this week was add a bit of dechlorinated tap water twice, and plucked off a leaf here or there, which wasn't really out of necessity more than our obsession for aesthetics. Beautiful green all around. No pH management, no run-off, no EC monitoring: just plants growing in the medium and environment they desire.
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Used techniques
Defoliation
Technique
12
Week 12. Harvest
10 months ago
Happy Harvest Day!
Rated
8/10
Rated
What can I say? It was a pleasure to grow, and even more of a pleasure to look at throughout the growing and curing process. I did a manual trim of the cured buds, since they originally went through the automatic trimmer due to time constraints. What is left is 13.5g of dense nuggets, fully cured after exactly 1 month after drying. We started with 19g after drying, so after removing quite a bit of extra trim and sticks, I'd say she made out pretty well! I apologize for the lousy pictures, as I just got a new phone with some strange settings I have to get used to. It's quite difficult to get a good shot like my previous one, so I took a bunch.
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Spent 79 days
Ger Veg Flo Har
19 g
Bud wet weight per plant
13.5 g
Bud dry weight per plant
1
Plants
3.81
Grow Room size
Easy
Difficulty
Positive effects
Euphoric, Energetic, Talkative
Positive effects
Medical effects
Stress
Medical effects
Taste
Flowery, Nutty, Fruity
Taste

Height
Day air temperature
Air humidity
Light schedule
Night air temperature
Substrate temperature
Pot size
Lamp distance
We made it to curing! I chopped her about 1.5 weeks ago, she dried well, and has been curing for a few days now. She could have went a few more days, but due to a PM outbreak in another tent, I wanted to get the whole grow room bleached for the next round, and wasn't taking any chances. We had a little bit of amber on non-leaf flower trichomes, so good enough! This plant was a beast. The second best producer out of the a lineup of 9 this round. That would likely be the Kush genetics in her, and to top it off, she smells wonderful. Sweet and floral. We haven't sampled any yet, and infact, I had to quit smoking, so we'll see what my father has to say in a couple weeks when done curing. After drying and partway through curing, we have approximately 19g of flower. We did a quick and rough trim with a machine trimmer, as we had 9 plants to take care of all at the same time, and didn't want them exposed to dry too long. I give this plant the highest rating out of any indoor plant I've grown over the 2 years I've done indoor, from a growing aspect. I'll post the smoke report when it is done cured, but for now, 10/10 -- would recommend!
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valiotoro
valiotorocommentedweek 128 months ago
Waouw your buds 🤩🤩
resi_max
resi_maxcommented8 months ago
@valiotoro, thank you buddy :)
iLoveGoodWeed
iLoveGoodWeedcommentedweek 129 months ago
This is some nice nugets friend good job 👊👍😀
resi_max
resi_maxcommented9 months ago
@iLoveGoodWeed, yup, top notch for sure. thanks!
Grower_Of_Persia
Grower_Of_Persiacommentedweek 129 months ago
top notch buds with very nice trim!!!
resi_max
resi_maxcommented9 months ago
@Grower_Of_Persia, thanks a lot buddy!
Grower_Of_Persia
Grower_Of_Persiacommentedweek 129 months ago
i can smell them from here Good job bro.
resi_max
resi_maxcommented9 months ago
Daapphustler
Daapphustlercommentedweek 129 months ago
Great job, looks tasty. Keep up the great work.
resi_max
resi_maxcommented9 months ago
@Daapphustler, thank you :)
Mastr
Mastrcommentedweek 1210 months ago
Nice quality bud 👌 Did you ever grow autoflower??? I never grow photoperiod and my auto buds sometimes not good ?any advice?
resi_max
resi_maxcommented10 months ago
@Mastr, Thank you. Yes, I've grown quite a few autoflowers before. In my experience, they are more difficult to work with than photoperiods and I stopped growing them for a while, but I started back again because most CBD-dominant strains are autos. They are more difficult for a few reasons, and it depends on exactly what you were unhappy about. It's hard to give specific advice without knowing what went wrong, but one hard thing is that they usually have a much quicker vegetative phase, and begin to flower when their roots are established enough or disturbed by transplanting or running out of "feet room". I really do enjoy building up to the quality structure I'm looking for before a plant enters the bloom phase, which is the main reason I prefer photoperiodic varieties, but a lot of autoflowering cultivars require being more careful with light, heat, training techniques, and other forms of stress in both vegetative and flowering phases to get good quality. Some even prefer longer than "conventional" 18-hour days to get more bio-mass or bud density. There are a few things I've mentioned that you could try, but the important thing is making sure your days are long enough, it's not too cool, you don't disturb them by means of transplanting them or high-stress training techniques, and more. If none of that works, feel free to shoot over a message, or maybe give a photoperiod a try, since you can play with it until you're happy with its form, and then flip it to bloom. I hope this helps, and thanks again!
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IL_Grow
IL_Growcommentedweek 128 months ago
What would I do for some bud like that rn 😋
ArtisticGrown
ArtisticGrowncommentedweek 129 months ago
Emmm from the sounds of it I wanna grow this strain omg energy!!! Haha I've been growing a decent amount of indica
ArtisticGrown
ArtisticGrowncommentedweek 129 months ago
I bet that cure is amazing!!! Dense nugs! Love it 🔥
Legendaryseedthumb
Legendaryseedthumbcommentedweek 126 months ago
Amazing!!!
resi_max
resi_maxcommented6 months ago
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El_Barto
El_Bartocommentedweek 129 months ago
Nice buds, good work 😎💪
PapaNugs
PapaNugscommentedweek 1210 months ago
Great job bud! Looks good and got through the whole process! Congrats 🎉
Dayo420
Dayo420commentedweek 1110 months ago
Good Job
Jea1986
Jea1986commentedweek 1210 months ago
Super cool! Hope getting to there soon
JMarquette
JMarquettecommentedweek 1210 months ago
Beautiful work!
PapaNugs
PapaNugscommentedweek 1210 months ago
Congrats bud! Look at those buds
Hattiwatti
Hattiwatticommentedweek 1210 months ago
Gongrats 🙏
XiggYgreen
XiggYgreencommentedweek 11a year ago
Congratulations 😍💚🌸😎🙏
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