It's a matter of shock. You don't want to take huge branches off the plant and have it shock out.ross said:So i think i am going to use this "lollipop" technique and turn what i cut into clones, but I've read contradicting things on the best time to do this. when do you guys think is the best time?
Start removing side growth while the plant is still in a solid vegetative cycle and continue doing so up until two weeks prior to placing it into flower.
hehe, yeah, but when I told my prom date about it, it had nothing to do with plants... :hubba:massproducer said:Lollipoppin has been around for a while as a term...
StoneyBud said:hehe, yeah, but when I told my prom date about it, it had nothing to do with plants... :hubba:
When a marijuana plant enters into it's flowering cycle, it develops many distinct changes in it's physical makeup. Hormones are created to accelerate the flowering development and reduce the vegetative growth of the leaves and minor stems.
Put that idea aside for a minute.
When a plant is harmed by pests, crushing, cutting or breakage, it also develops a hormone that is different from the flowering hormone and causes the plant to slow it's growth while this hormone redirects the plants energy to the area of damage. During this repair, ALL other hormones within the plant are reduced or stop all together, depending on the severity of the damage and the resources needed to repair it.
If one causes damage to the plant after it's already started it's hormonal alteration into flowering, what happens is a double delay in flowering to the plants full capacity. The hormones that the plant WOULD HAVE made to accelerate flowering are no longer produced in their natural quantity and repair hormones are created instead, to repair the damage of the areas the cutting were taken from.
This is a proven, unmistakable process that takes place with certainty.
If cuttings are to be taken, the proper method to use is to take them in small quantities involving 30% of the total plant mass or less. This will greatly reduce the possibility of causing the plant to stall growth or become a hermaphrodite due to stress.
Always take cutting while the plant is still within the vegetative cycle.
Never take more than 30% of the plants total vegetative mass within any given healing time.
If you're going to trim the bush to eliminate side growth, the proper time to do so is at least two weeks PRIOR to placing the plant into it's flowering cycle.
This type of pruning should be a progressive procedure done during the plants entire life cycle. Not just at one last minute time.
Start removing side growth while the plant is still in a solid vegetative cycle and continue doing so up until two weeks prior to placing it into flower.
This allows the plant to fully recover it's full vegetative health, switch it's hormones back to the vegetative growth hormones from the repair hormones and then allows it time to stabilize before again changing it's hormones into the flowering phase.
btw, I can't bring myself to use the term "lollipoping". It makes me cringe for some reason. It's like calling the vegetative cycle "The greeny-meanie" cycle, or saying that the plant has to make it's boo boo better. hehe
Folks, the hormonal changes that marijuana goes through are outlined in almost every grow book. I always advise people to buy one of these books to gain the information that isn't found within groups like these. It will also help displace most of the bullcrap that is made up by some of the wannabe scientists that frequent this type of group to stroke their egos.
Good luck to all of you, and please, research what I've said. You'll find that everything I've said is exactly as it is in real, botanical science.
If you doubt it, look it up. Let me know if you find something written by someone with a PhD that contradicts something I've said. I'd be interested to learn from him or her.
If one causes damage to the plant after it's already started it's hormonal alteration into flowering, what happens is a double delay in flowering to the plants full capacity. The hormones that the plant WOULD HAVE made to accelerate flowering are no longer produced in their natural quantity and repair hormones are created instead, to repair the damage of the areas the cutting were taken from.
This is a proven, unmistakable process that takes place with certainty.
Tater said:Just curious do you have any sources with PhD's that prove what you are saying? How is it fair that you don't have to quote sources but anyone who wishes to refute you needs to before you will believe them? Just curious, don't take this as a personal attack, look at it more like a civil debate between two people.
What hormones are you talking about? Please be more specific. From the research I have done on the subject plants that rely on a dark period in order to increase the hormone florigen do not react negatively (speaking solely on the hormone required for flower production and not stress induced hermaphrodisim) to physical damage, they keep on keepin on so to say. Since marijuana is a phototropic plant each node is independent of the others as far as its flowering hormone goes.
This can be proven by tying a bag around a single branch inducing a 12/12 flowering cycle on ONLY that branch to induce flowering at that single location on the plant while the rest of the plant will remain in a vegetative state. If what you were saying about hormones were true then either the entire plant should begin to flower, or that branch should not flower as the hormones would be distributed among the entire plant.
Also what are the hormones that you speak of that are responsible for repairing plant damage and how do the supersede the activities of floragin in a plant? I did a search for
hormones responsible for repairing trauma in plants -> turned up nothing I could find
hormones responsible for repairing damage in plants -> still nothing
then I tried this, cells responsible for repairing damage in plants
http://www.biology-online.org/11/2_plant_tissues.htm
this popped up which is much more in line with the research I have personally done on the subject. Turns out that is a really great read for anyone interested in the biology of plants.
If you are interested in photoperiodism in plants here's a few sources to peruse at your leisure should you so choose.
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e30/30c.htm Good basic outline of the principles involved.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=VqOyqcZfKjMC&pg=PA5&lpg=PA5&dq=florigen+in+cannabis+sativa&source=bl&ots=8f9prREhMc&sig=d29pLvs_YCi0F7SvLRHWZm7hayk&hl=en&ei=3EMdSo-5MZimNaXIhJoP&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4#PPA3,M1
This is much more in depth but a great read.
http://pcp.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/13/1/131
This one talks about the effects of red and far red (infrared light) on long dark period flowering plants.
another one
http://resources.metapress.com/pdf-preview.axd?code=w460651566713216&size=largest
and another
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1086578
If this is true I am very interested in reading your sources, so if you don't mind to terribly could you point me in the right direction?
If I've totally missed the point please correct me as I'm here to learn and try to take part in educated debate.
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