2 quick easy questions

theDIYcoastguardguy

Well-Known Member
Ok, i have 4 plants that are a little over two weeks old and are doing great. my questions start here. the stems are purple.. is this normal? what causes this? question two, when should i 12/12 them to sex them? and when i do 12/12 them, how long will it take for them to show sex??
 

JLStiffy

Well-Known Member
Hey
For the purple stem it can mean two mainly two things 1) either lacking N or an over dose of N. I would guess that if your plants are two weeks old and if u are not feeding them a veg feed, it would prob be cured if u start a feed program on them and adjust pH to 6.4. Or transplant them and water with a pH 6.4.
Question 2. I take it u started them from seeds because u are curious about sexing them. U should wait one more week or until they show signs of maturity then flower and wait to see how the plants react to the light. Males will have the tendency to shoot straight up creating longer internode length, and they will start to develope ball sacks- U cannot make a mistake betweeen male and female. Start looking for these signs between the 2end and 3rd internode spacing. How long it takes (in my opinion) depends more on less what strain u are using. BUT when i say that I mean does it have a more dominant indica or ruderalis for examples.
when I did a indica/ruderalis strain for outdoors and I had to start them from seed, I veged them for 1 month and thats includeing the time from the point i stuck them in soil after the seeds germinated. Then it took me about 1 1/2 weeks to see a strong sign of sexing.
Good luck
 

mared juwan

Well-Known Member
This is from the GrowFAQ. purple stems can be from genetics, cold temps or phosphorous deficiency. I have it in my plants more often than not during veg so don't worry about it unless your plants are flowering and have other problems.

"Phosphorus (P) deficiency:

Figure 11 is severe phosphorus (P) deficiency during flowering. Fan leaves are dark green or red/purple, and may turn yellow. Leaves may curl under, go brown and die. Small-formed buds are another main symptom.
Phosphorus deficiencies exhibit slow growing, weak and stunted plants with dark green or purple pigmentation in older leaves and stems.
Some deficiency during flowering is normal, but too much shouldn't be tolerated. Red petioles and stems are a normal, genetic characteristic for many varieties, plus it can also be a co-symptom of N, K, and Mg-deficiencies, so red stems are not a foolproof sign of P-deficiency. Too much P can lead to iron deficiency.
Purpling: accumulation of anthocyanin pigments; causes an overall dark green color with a purple, red, or blue tint, and is the common sign of phosphate deficiency. Some plant species and varieties respond to phosphate deficiency by yellowing instead of purpling. Purpling is natural to some healthy ornamentals."
 
Top