Ringsixty
Well-Known Member
Because it's a FUN experiment to do.Why even bother when you can buy a lifetime supply of silver nitrate and sodium thiosulfate for 30 bux.
Never know when the SHFT will happen.
Because it's a FUN experiment to do.Why even bother when you can buy a lifetime supply of silver nitrate and sodium thiosulfate for 30 bux.
Good points.Just be sure not to be lazy if you spray only one branch. For starters, it's hard to do. If you're trying to protect the pot so you can smoke it, you'll need to isolate that branch, and it's enough work that you'll likely not spray as many times a day as if you could spray the whole plant.
Plus the lower branches don't bud as much, and seem not to make as many pollen pods.
So you've got 2 negatives against you spraying just one branch, and if the colloidal wasn't that great, you've got a good chance of getting pollen too late and too little.
Not good if it's the first time because it'll damage your confidence. I highly recommend anyone doing this the first time (not saying that's you) to spray the heck out of the whole plant, 3 times a day till you see pods. You can back off once you realize how easy it is.
Do you keep spraying until you see pods, or you trust to stop after 2 weeks?just take a couple clones. Spray 1 b.i.d with CS , one week before flower. Flower both and boom you can make your seed stock and not worry about over spray., accident pollen release etc.
I start spraying 1 week before flowering. Then stop once I see the bananas forming. Takes about 2 weeks.Do you keep spraying until you see pods, or you trust to stop after 2 weeks?
No, It's an Auto. It's going to do what autos do, Reach its developed stage and flower. DoneSo I still have a little paranoia. Let's say you see bananas forming, but you're using 24/7 lighting on an autoflower.
Is it possible to reverse the conversion so that you don't get enough pollen to pollinate a reasonable portion of that or another plant?
I have noticed the 24/7 keeps new white pistils coming all the way until the end, making it hard to judge harvest by color.