The fan leaves are HUGE. I'm guessing this is expressing a lot of Liberty Haze traits. I'm sure she is a cross between GSC and Liberty Haze. The suspense is killing me!!
@TheBudWhisperer, Yup. I was hesitant but after trimming two 7 foot plants with yields of 1lb dry each... I agreed to give it a try. We found out that the trim it produces is top notch. We cook with our cannabis so it's perfect. We also put a bunch in our volcano and it worked as well as bud. I don't see a down side.
Beautiful looking girl she is a towering monster lol very nice to see this one ,I'm growing in southern Ontario and this year has been up and down for growing out here ..
you have the best updates, AnneW... and the best pics with you in them as a model, really puts things in perspective and it's refreshing to see ! i'm seeing ambers, quite a few maybe 25% ... what i always say (and i've only been at it three times so far, so pinch of salt...) is that many trichomes turn amber after the chop anyway. In other words, to me, she's ready to come down even today ! More trimming ! Hurray ! 🚀
@Njanne, #noexcuses #harvestmonth #canadianproblems get those blades out ! haha maybe the GSC would have gone into the taste, but many GSC crosses dont really carry the GSC forward that's the thing ! looking forward to it
@Njanne, "I don't think I can handle any more harvesting!" this is SUCH A CANADIAN PROBLEM 😅 with the trimming machines you can dry trim which gives a smoother smoke imo... but if you mess that up then you have way harder work... also my experience....
A bit of a strange leaf profile, but it is young and looks healthy...so.
I've been growing (just) lots of mystery seeds, it's kinda fun.
Anyway, best of luck!
@Njanne,
Well, you do say "growroom" there, so airflow is more of a concern I guess, but at least, outdoor that'd be different (hopefully).
In vegetation mold is fairly unlikely (from my experience at least), things like potassium (bi)carbonate, silica, compost tea can be used as foliar sprays for some resistance, as well as nutrient feeds.
From what I've seen, heavy stress causes mold. For instance other than applied stress, too dry, too wet continuously, or very sudden changes...and then in flowering things like density and possibly seeding, also caterpillars, and random debris that gathers/captures moisture and keeps in a specific place for a while.
I've been growing 160+ plants and none have had mold issues (with some extreme and very varied conditions, mostly straight outdoor) until continuous caterpillar damage, humidity, cold, different stressful situations hit in (late) flowering. Well, actually, there was one batch which some other people kept too moist and out of the sun that molded very very quickly, as 1 week old seedlings.
The best advice I have is to *try* not force your plant, but understand the simplest ways to improve conditions.
@@Ssomeguy, I just keep the soil moist. I don't want mold... Truthfully tho, the grow room is closer to 45 at the moment, I just didn't bother to update the data...
General comments about stuff I've experienced growing random plants though I've only been growing anything for a year or so... But I've grown many of them, very varied strains, strange conditions. The plants in general will stretch a lot with heat/light (large variations of direct and ambient, high peaks) naturally, their profile will generally match the root space, lots of rain (possibly with heat though) will reduce leaflet count and coverage, their roots prefer horizontal space. Having them hot and dry, then introduce to cold and moist can easily cause mildew in a short time. I had 4m tall plants (vertical space is easier to get) in 50cm diameter horizontal space that were still alive and generating pistils after 40 something weeks and seemed to want even more time, but conditions weren't good enough (cold and VERY low humidity/moisture levels).
Anyway, that plant of yours looked REALLY good when I saw it initially, and yeah Barney's in general seems excellent. Great growing though.
@Njanne,
I would give that at least 2 weeks, probably more, depending on how well she matures. Outer trichomes don't tell the full story regarding cannabinoids and terpenes.
@Njanne, that is a nice experiment, I guess. Feel free to drop by for a visit, im growing indoors in the Brazilian Amazon Rain Forest!
Happy growing!
Tchau, do Brazil! =)
Wow..you are a great cultivator🙏 ... I would be happy to give you a hand for cleaning ..... we are also quite similar 😉..... Congratulations ... true green thumb 👌
That plant looks fantastic. Sure it's going to look a bit heavy when it's super wet, but that thing looks like a pretty kickass plant to me. I'm like sitting here itching to transplant that thing though...
Anyway, keep it up!
@Njanne,
Yeah...I ran into problems with plants that were too tall/heavy in my first grow...was not expecting them to get to the sort of sizes they did. Good luck!
Hi, I was looking at light/heat stress earlier, and I noticed it can cause that strange leaf profile you initially had. Maybe initially something about your indoor lighting was slightly off? Not that I reckon that's really a problem, but you might want to check it out (in case it is of concern).
@Njanne,
Sorry, I can't link anything interesting. I just remember seeing some similar sorts of leaf profiles (kinda like crumpled or angular?), generally worse than your plant there though, related to light/heat. It could very easily be something else. I'd say it's a very minor issue unless you're constantly growing something with that (indoor) lighting, even if it's not something else that caused that.
😀Congratulations on your diary win!
A brand new Crater 420 dry herb & natural leaf Vaporizer has been dispatched to you.
Best Regards
www.mycrater.co.uk
#fog.life
I have questions:
- does a stress induced hermaphrodite produce pollen? (i.e. external pollen sacs) Or, do the calyxes just sort of internally convert to seeds.
My outdoor plants were for sure light stressed and produced seeds. For the plant that was maybe not directly stressed, I’m wondering if its possible that one of the hermaphrodite’s pollinated it. I believe this would produce feminized seeds (if you induce hermaphroditism by spraying a female, it should only have XX, and the female also XX).
So in other words, did Laughing Buddha get pollinated by a hermie, and my seeds are feminized, or did it get stressed and merely self pollinate?
- does a seed from a stressed hermaphrodite plant produce a feminized plant? Hermie plant? Are the future genetics more vulnerable to be hermie?
Your diary suggests there is no harm. I have had mixed results, a planted hermie seed produced something (Starfish Jr.), but every successive seed or clone was mutated and funky, producing both sex parts.
@@BeanswithPork, I honestly don't know, but this is something I'd like to learn more about. Yes, a stress induced herm does produce pollen... that much I don know. I don't know if the resulting seeds will certainly be female though... I think plants that herm, are genetically more likely to herm... so future generations would probably be increasingly likely to produce herms. I have heard growers complain that plants that herm easily, are poor genetics.