lordjin
Well-Known Member
Well I didn't notice the broad mites until flower, and it basically makes the pistils start to die as soon as they pop out of the calyx. It's pretty sad looking, here's a pic of the white urkle at day 23 flower.
View attachment 2006386
At least a couple people on a different site immediately identified it as broad mites just from the pic of the white urkle flower (a couple people said TMV but that was quickly shot down as being untrue/impossible)
edit: I should mention that I did verify the broad mites by seeing the eggs with my microscope, 30x and just barely able to see them, and after a long time looking at leaves for eggs I eventually saw a little guy run across the view of my microscope
Now I'm at day 39 flower and they still sort of look like that...I also have larry x bubba from PO which seems to also have the broad mites because they have basically never had any fresh pistils coming out of the flowers but are still growing trichomes (kind of confusing to me). The flowers are also extremely tiny, almost no growth in size after week 2 or so (I think another sign of broad mites). Here's a pic of the larry x bubba at day 29 flower, and despite the size it looks frosty enough for my standards (I might just make tons of BHO) so I'm not too angry overall-
View attachment 2006393
And the tahoe seems fine for some reason! View attachment 2006395
At day 39 the flowers almost look like miniature versions of your last grow (keyword: almost), so I'm very excited!!!
Hey, I was doing some research about the pests associated with PO's cuts and google led me right to my own journal! Lol. Apparently I discussed it briefly with another user back in January (see above).I forgot to mention any way to get rid of this, because I talked to the PO staff and got some info:
I can't remember if you already sprayed/dipped your clones, and if so just disregard the rest of this - I'm not trying to tell you what to do since you are LORDjin: but the PO staff made it seem like there were a number of products you can use in veg preventatively to be sure you don't have these (or any) critters. I didn't realize I had them until flower so I'm kind of screwed, I'm using Mighty wash and crossing my fingers.
But based on what they and others said, it's really easy to take care of in veg with stuff like neem-based products (or other oil-based sprays) and it gives you a nice protective layer. They also mentioned hotshot no pest strips if you want to really kill them dead, but I grow in my bedroom closet so I was worried about killing myself also. They were also talking about products like avid and forbid, but I think that's only if you know you have them because that stuff is serious and expensive-
Anyways I'm not saying you have them, I'm not sure how to tell during veg (other than with a good microscope and seeing the bumpy eggs), but I don't think spraying neem hurts anything during veg (please someone correct me if this is wrong)
So I was cruising the threads and reading about various insects and am shocked and horrified by broad mites. HORRIFIED.
These are very tiny.
How tiny? Look how big they make a white fly look. GROSS.
And as Fro mentioned above, the tell-tale sign is the plant's inability to grow hairs or pistils during flower as exhibited in this Casey Jones plant I found online:
Completely conistent with Fro's diangnosis above. And what's even more disturbing is that the actual user from Grass city who posted this pic said once broad mites have attacked your buds, they're rendered unsmokable.
The best treatment is no treatment.
Man, I went through two full bottles of this stuff fighting the powdery mildew last time. Fucking soaked the shit out of ALL my buds repeatedly.
Now at the time I was thinking the product was completely safe because my plants seemed to shake off the smell and looked even healthier after a spraying.... But alas anything extreme isn't desirable, so for me to think that they didn't suffer in the least from this aggressive serenade treatment would be delusional.
The stuff worked well, but I'm glad to leave it alone this time. Going the sterile route seems to have taken care of everything.
So having said that, I'm really happy to report that my grow is clean this time. No PM, and certainly no broad mites, and no soaking with Serenade. Should result in a nicer finish.