Do Lower Temperatures Really Change The Color Of Certain Strains?
Or is it just a forum myth.
If so...how cold do I have to get them? Night and day?
So are you implying that color change ONLY occurs as a result of phosphorous deficiency, and that coldness causes this deficiency?When your plants are deficient in phosphorus, this can overall reduce the size of your plants. Not enough causes slow growth and causes the plant to become weak, to little amount of Phosphorus causes slow growths in leaves that may or may not drop off. The edges all around the leaves or half of the leaves can be brownish and work its way inwards a bit causing the part of the leaves to curl up in the air a bit. Fan leaves will show dark greenish/purplish and yellowish tones along with a dullish blue color to them. Sometimes the stems can be red, along with red petioles that can happen when having a Phosphorus deficiency. This isnt a sure sure sign of you having one though, but can be a sign. Some strains just show the red petioles and stems from its genes.
So pretty much the overall dark green color with a purple, red, or blue tint to the fan leaves is a good sign of a Phosphorus deficiency. Having Cold weather (below 50F/10C) can make phosphorous absorption very troublesome for plants.
I believe soSo are you implying that color change ONLY occurs as a result of phosphorous deficiency, and that coldness causes this deficiency?
yes. cold weather hinders phosphorus absorption causing a deficiency, causing the plant to turn purple.So are you implying that color change ONLY occurs as a result of phosphorous deficiency, and that coldness causes this deficiency?
That link isn't really relevant to cannabis, which is an annual not perennial.Is this a troll thread? One of my females I clone gets purple pistols with colder nighttime temps just about every time. You can't really simulate it indoors, gotta let nature do it's thing. The last couple years I've put them in a greenhouse for an extra couple weeks after frost.
Here's a good link for you lads~ http://www.na.fs.fed.us/fhp/pubs/leaves/leaves.shtm