bob harris
Well-Known Member
It's just that I do tend to grow the same strain for a long time. And I've noticed that they like different things. I've got a batch of Long flowering time sativa (14 weeks) that is just about done. I've grown this strain for the last 3 years, and I always treat for mites around the end of the 3rd week of flower, whether I see mites or not. Just feel it's the last opportunity before the plants are really a pain to handle. This time I tried to mix my own pyrthum (or however it's spelled) from concentrate, and must have made it way to strong. Plants reacted like I sprayed them with acid..leaves crinkling up and dying all over the place. Plants ended up dropping almost all their fan leaves by the 6th week of flower. It's affected my yield..far fewer buds. The odd thing is the buds that are there are the nicest looking I've seen this strain produce. Huge resin production, fat and colorful. Some how the "stress" of the ordeal seems to have made the plant produce better looking buds.Bob,
I think you just explained it. If you stick with a strain and keep fine tuning and getting better, then you learn what is the right way and what is the wrong way.
If you have been growing a strain for several runs and then you pluck off all the fan leaves early in flowering and you don't yield nearly as much, then YOU KNOW that is the wrong way, if it increases it, then it's the right way. It is that simple. I don't know the answer, cuz I have never experimented with it. I, like many others, have always plucked them when they looked half dead (or worse obviously). I think this is one debate that does have a right answer, and I sure am curious. It is a concept that I don't think would vary greatly between strains either.
Very Interesting I think.
Now, I don't plan on trying to repeat this procedure and call it a 'technique", but it sure reminds me of how many times I've seen a strain do something I've never see before.