Outdoor grow in central Virginia. Bunch of guys around here have seen it...most of us are newbs...and have been startled at how fast it spreads. I had to toss my mutant midget plant last week and put a fan on my other two plants in flower. Micro grows of 4 plants and we can get fussy like that...
Day 95
Chopped one of the white widows today. Ideally I would have let it grow another week. We have a bit of amber, but I've cut out a couple of small bud rots, so I wanted to get it drying out rather than getting rained on every day with 99% humidity. The curse of the outdoor grow in these...
RIP, little plant. Bud rot outta left field. There was some on every cola.
The White Widows are ambering up. Have a fan on them after today's torrential rains, since I plan to chop 'em Saturday or Sunday.
I believe the runt has the rot. What do y'all think? Trics are mostly cloudy with a few amber. Any reason not to go ahead and cut this thing down, trim and dry?
I performed a dissection of sorts on one of the "pods" and don't see anything that suggests seed to me...just green plant tissue. I think you're right about the anatomy.
Interesting, this. Looks very very similar. Now I don't think there's any way this plant could have been pollinated. Outdoors with three other very female plants and no neighbors growing anywhere nearby.
Hmm...thought I had inserted a full image...tried to edit it. Did that work?
I wondered if those were seeds, but there was never anything in the crotches that made me think it could be a male. Someone (on another thread a while back) said they were female brachts / calyxes (calyses?).
I don't know but I don't think it's revegging. The plant has been outdoors since week 1, and it has looked like this ever since it started to flower. It's also really short. Some kind of mutant maybe.
Just for fun...this is a rando autoflower that was shipped to me labeled as a photoperiod Girl Scout Cookie seed. What I do know is that it isn't that, and I know it's dang near impossible to figure out a strain just by looking at it but I'm wondering if this flower structure is unusual and...
I gave my plant a good spray, trying to hit the underside of leaves as well as the tops, with spinosad yesterday, or maybe the day before and still had 3 or 4 leafhoppers this morning. Gave 'em a taste of pyganic to see how they like that.
One of my kids showed me Picture Insect. I've used it just for fun around the house to get used to it, but when I had a bunch of little critters on one of my plants I used the app to identify them as Leafhoppers. (It actually identified them as some variety that only lives in Canada, but close...
Leafhoppers. Little outbreak on the photo Girl Scout Cookie. Will give them a dose of spinosad this evening. BTW, I just found out that spinosad once mixed with water only lasts for 24 hours. So...a fresh batch for each application is the call.
KCl worked pretty well for me last year, and it's cheap. I have only had spots of WPM this year but sprayed with Agrowlyte and it knocked it right out. More expensive for sure but might be worth a look...