Try letting the plant over ripen. Just dont pull it till it herms.. In some cases that might not work but we're not mother nature.. that bitch is devastating.. we can't compare our grow rooms to the harshest outdoor conditions.
True but listen i am presently growing north of the 60th parallel temps have been - 4 in mornings and up to 18 in afternoons winds 80 mph if this is not any indication of harsh climate ??? or major stress on the plant i do not know what is then ...
Yet i would place bets if this plant was from fem seed she be throwing everything at me including nanners what ever but its not cause its reg seeds
but again cherry pie x pck strain probably stable
The fact remains when you look at your nose and say to your self well does n look like my moms or my dads but its identical to my grandfather's snot box ,,, You should ask your self why and how could that of happened ,,,,
Cause really at the end of the day the DNA gets thrown in bag and shaken like rolling the dice ,, you will not always get the same numbers popping up in sequence but again the truth the real truth is that bag of DNA that the fem seed has is half full now so 50 percent lose when its shaken up and its bottlenecked this is not a good thing ask your self why with S1 cross there can be still variations ??? actually a shit more then F1
Typically an F1 of a cross will contain genes from two unrelated plants and typically an F1 will display a 1:3:1 ratio where the majority of plants will display a mixture of the two plants dominant traits.
It is at the F2 generation of the same cross that will start to display a larger swing in phenotype.
The S1 (self pollinated 1st gen) on the other hand does not contain genes from two unrelated plants, as does an F1. The selfing (S1) is more akin to an F2 than an F1 (in reality the S1 is an F2). It is in fact the second generation where related genetic maps are crossed. And as such the S1 will show more variation than a regular bred F1. HOWEVER the genetic maps used are nearly identical in the S1 so the variation is not as noticeable as it would be with an F2.
If the female used is homozygous the variation will be far less than if she is heterozygous.
Confused yet?
The selfing will also lack the hybrid vigor that a true F1 enjoys.
The reversal that uses two unrelated females can enjoy hybrid vigor and will also display phenotypes as an F1 would. The reversal (R1) using unrelated plants is in fact an F1, whereas the selfing (S1) is in fact an F2.
A reversal that uses one female for the mother, and her sister is forced for pollen, is in fact an F2. However the cross had a bit more genetic material to work with than the selfing and as a result can display a bit more diversity.