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Buds look weird

PatronEl
PatronElstarted grow question a day ago
Hey guys, anybody know what’s up with my plant ? Third week into flowering since Saturday. Yesterday evening I lollipopped the plant and now 90% of the buds look like the buds in the first picture. The second picture is how they looked before.
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Buds. Other
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m0use
m0useanswered grow question 21 hours ago
no diary hard to pinpont. I've seen pistils do this from damage to them. When you where lollipopping if they got bumped or brushed around this could be a reaction to it. Or to much direct airflow on them or from RH/Temps going a bit wacky. I'd lean towards they where disturbed when you where plucking it down.
AsNoriu
AsNoriuanswered grow question a day ago
Never had i any shock from lolipoping , yes, leaves could go droppy for a day max, but no colour change in leaves or pistils. Pistils are only esthetic, it wont influence harvest, but they indicate a lot to well train eye. Change of colour or shrinking can happy from many things : wind damage, low temps during night, hot temps ( stoned and started to doubt, if no, then low RH ) and high rh , pollination, wrong ph in ( made this many time with too acidic feed ) and so on ....
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SnakeGrow
SnakeGrowanswered grow question a day ago
It looks to be the "shock" of lollipopping . Plants (not only Cannabis) are easily disturbed by repotting , pruning , and also growing-techniques . You should watch them the next few days for signs of other problems , but they should recover in afew days 💪
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Ultraviolet
Ultravioletanswered grow question a day ago
The main thing to remember is if the leaves are a uniform color that isnt a healthy green its micronutrients (sulfur etc) or general soil conditions (pH) peaking too high. If the leaves have green veins and pale leaf bodies, non-uniform color, the plant is lacking N P or K and the uneveness is from the plant redistributing where its scarce resources are used. Calcium sulfate, commonly known as gypsum, is readily absorbable by plants when applied to the soil because it readily dissolves in water, releasing calcium and sulfate ions which can be directly taken up by plant roots; this makes it a valuable source of calcium for plant growth, particularly in soils with low calcium levels.
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