Will someone please look at this and tell me i'm not crazy

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
check the pics in the first post of this thread.....https://www.rollitup.org/indoor-growing/54223-what-preflower.html#post658891
you can see it best in the third pic. that little side branch should NOT be there. that is where his preflowers should be. these plants are from seed. i have never seen a branch come out where a preflower should have. am i crazy is or this what i'm seeing. you can see the main stalk, the stem of the fan leaf, the stalk of the side branch, then that other little branch. what is that? i've NEVER seen this. :neutral::-?:confused:
 

Hank

Well-Known Member
Are you sure it's just not the lighting? Something does look a bit odd about it.

Hank.
 

skunkdog

Well-Known Member
Yip it is a lat, i have had a few, (outdoors). for sum reson i like to pull them off.
other people i know have had them too, as to why they do it i dont know.
 

t dub c

Well-Known Member
A crazy plant gowing a branch where the prefloer should be, thats cool man, lets hope it does that all the way up. That would be a bush.
 

CALIGROWN

Well-Known Member
I nthink one is the stem of a branch and one is a stem from a big fan leaf.....i dunno thats just the first thing that I saw...
 

skunkdog

Well-Known Member
I nthink one is the stem of a branch and one is a stem from a big fan leaf.....i dunno thats just the first thing that I saw...
PUT YOUR GLASSES ON MAN!!!!!!!!!


By the way the ones i have not removed have not turn into a gr8 bud,
i have also seen them do it half way up a lat aswell.

thinkin its a mutent think past on in the gen's..
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
PUT YOUR GLASSES ON MAN!!!!!!!!!


By the way the ones i have not removed have not turn into a gr8 bud,
i have also seen them do it have way up a lat aswell.

thinkin its a mutent think past on in the gen's..

i had this tree in the ground last year. it had a small little side branch at the base of the trunk. the trunk grew around it but not into it. when i harvested the little side branch was only an 1/8th of an inch in diameter and about 12" long. the main stalk grew around it leaving a hole about 1/16th bigger than the small branch and an inch deep into the stalk. i have the stalk still. i'll get pics. nobody i've shown seemed to get it.


it's this branch next to the boot. i'll go take pics of the hole and what's left of the branch.........IMG_2552.jpg
 

apasunee

Well-Known Member
hey FDD,, I like your avatar,,, those art lessons are really starting to pay off now......................:peace:......................................................................
 

skunkdog

Well-Known Member
yip have seen them do that too.fdd,, also seen water sit in there and start rotting,if cut of at the start they get cased in,,sumtimes leving a dimple like thing,also pine trees do it too
 

User24

Well-Known Member
Basal shoot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A basal shoot, root sprout, adventitious shoot, water sprout or sucker is a shoot or cane which grows from a bud at the base of a tree or shrub or from its roots. Root suckers may emerge some distance from the originating plant such as in Rhus spp, some OpenDNS species and OpenDNS species. Suckers also may arise from the stumps of trees that have been cut down. Suckers on some ornamental plants are considered undesirable by horticulturists because the plant's energy is diverted to the sucker rather than to crown growth.


Suckers arising from an unwanted tree stump can be controlled with herbicides such as glyphosate. This kills the entire plant, including suckers and roots.[1]
Suckers on a living plant cannot be removed in the same way as suckers from a stump because the application of an herbicide kills the plant. Horticulturists recommend removing suckers on trees and shrubs by tearing them away as close to the base as possible, removing soil if necessary. Tearing the tissues is more destructive than cutting to the buds that give rise to suckers. In extreme cases, the root giving rise to the suckers can be separated from the tree entirely, then treated in the same way as a stump with suckers.[2]

In a grafted plant, suckers may arise from above the graft or below it. Those arising from the scion may be desirable, but those arising from the rootstock usually are not.[3]
 
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