Thank you for the replys! Ive popped a few and they are growing nicely ive got to wait another 5 weeks before i cannput them in the flower room. The plant that hermied by the way came from regular seeds, i had 3 doublegum from whitelabel. All 3 germed and grew inro females the shortest one of the 3 hermied possibly through the pots being too small? I culled all of them but kept cutting off the 2 that didnt hermie and they are in flower now, fingers crossed and no sign of balls. Ive got 3weeks left so hopefully im safe from the trannys this time round!!
This seems to be an old thread but i have a good amount of experience on this subject. I had a blue cheese that was a hermi nightmare and absolutely destroyed my crop...thousands of seeds. In the end, i had a blue cheese x super lemon haze that turned out nice with absolutely no sign of hermaphrodism. On another run i had a casey jones slightly hermi and polinate 3 different strains. I ran 20 of these seeds from these three different crosses and once again not one male flower on any of them. I would be alittle hesitant to run seeds from a self pollination, but unless im extremely lucky you should be fine. Its my theory that the hermi problem associated with fems is due to inbreeding.
Some say cucumbers taste better pickled.I think its kinda splitting hairs to break down what constitutes a "real" hermaphrodite.
You do not know what you are talking about.Bottom line is there is something about the breeding process used by many companies that makes fems more prone to push out both male and female parts.
Feminized seeds do not have a Y chromosome.I dont think most growers will care if their fem has X or Y chromosomes when their garden is loaded with seeds.
You are confused again and spreading lies based on the experiences of crappy growers.And yes true males have been discovered from fem seeds.
So then chill and stop lying.Bottom line is there is something about the breeding process used by many companies that makes fems more prone to push out both male and female parts.
You both make me angry and remind me of the reasons why I don't spend much time on this site. 2,310 posts how many are of you just repeating and annoying, relax and start posting something useful trousers
okayI see you post that you think he's lying great great we get it thanks.
Why are plants from feminized seeds more likely to produce male flowers? It does not stand up logically.And mr Danky back up your statements a bit more, I as well do feel that fem seeds more often show male flowers in bud if stressed
That is your opinion. I would suggest that new growers not listen to your baseless opinions and go ahead and use feminized seeds.from my own experience I feel that reg seeds are often a safer choice for growers who are new or that are going to grow in less desirable conditions.
If it was a male then it could not have come from a feminized seed. Feminized seeds do not have a Y chromosome.I have bought fem seeds and ended up with a plant that physically showed only male flowers was it genetically a male? who knows.
It is odd you want me to do research when you hold opinions that can not be true.With that said even some reg strains will be less or more prone to this behaviour just do some research.