Chop Time Purple Kush

zack66

Well-Known Member
10 weeks tomorrow since switch to 12/12. Triches are mostly cloudy with a couple amber. Not looking for the total couch lock. Fed GO line and teas. I fed N up until week 7 of flower. They all stayed nice and green. No defoliation except dying leaves. Thinking around 3 zips per plant. I grew 6 this time. Next round of ladies going in flower room today.
 

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Turm

Active Member
Looks awesome man, what did you flower under? Should get close ups once your chopping is all done, then let us know what you got for dry weight once its all done with.
 

zack66

Well-Known Member
Looks awesome man, what did you flower under? Should get close ups once your chopping is all done, then let us know what you got for dry weight once its all done with.
600 watt light. Only have a camera phone so i'm limited on quality pics. Will try and take some close-ups later. And thanks for the compliment.
 

zack66

Well-Known Member
i feed the general organics GO lineup and i get that purple color on the leaves as well. whats your take on this?
I don't think the GO line has anything to do with the purple color. Probably genetics with what i'm running. I grow in my cold basement and get lot's of color during winter. Very little color during summer months. Cold temps help turn purple strains purple.
 

RetiredMatthebrute

Well-Known Member
yeah im growing in my basement as well and its pretty chilly there.

do you know if a purple leaf still has the ability to photosynthisize? i know some plants are purple by nature (like purple basil) so i would assume they do but you know what assuming does lol
 

RetiredMatthebrute

Well-Known Member
i suppose i just answered my own question


Q: How does photosynthesis occur in plants that are not obviously green, such as ornamental plum trees with deep purple-colored leaves? [Paul, Santa Cruz]
A: Photosynthesis (which literally means “light put together”) is that very elegant chemical process that jump-started life as we know it some 4 billion years ago. So to answer your question, we’ll need a short chemistry lesson. Basically six molecules of water (H2O) plus six molecules of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the presence of light energy produce one molecule of glucose sugar (C6H12O6) and emit six molecules of oxygen (O2) as a by-product. That sugar molecule drives the living world. Animals eat plants, then breathe in oxygen, which is used to metabolize the sugar, releasing the solar energy stored in glucose and giving off carbon dioxide as a by-product. That’s life, in a nutshell.
All photosynthesizing plants have a pigment molecule called chlorophyll. This molecule absorbs most of the energy from the violet-blue and reddish-orange part of the light spectrum. It does not absorb green, so that’s reflected back to our eyes and we see the leaf as green. There are also accessory pigments, called carotenoids, that capture energy not absorbed by chlorophyll. There are at least 600 known carotenoids, divided into yellow xanthophylls and red and orange carotenes. They absorb blue light and appear yellow, red, or orange to our eyes. Anthocyanin is another important pigment that’s not directly involved in photosynthesis, but it gives red stems, leaves, flowers, or even fruits their color.
Many plants are selected as ornamentals because of their red leaves— purple smoke bush and Japanese plums and some Japanese maples, to name just a few. Obviously they manage to survive quite well without green leaves. At low light levels, green leaves are most efficient at photosynthesis. On a sunny day, however, there is essentially no difference between red and green leaves’ ability to trap the sun’s energy. I have noticed the presence of red in the new leaves of many Bay Area plants as well as in numerous tropical species. The red anthocyanins apparently prevent damage to leaves from intense light energy by absorbing ultraviolet light. There is also evidence that unpalatable compounds are often produced along with anthocyanins, which may be the plant’s way of advertising its toxicity to potential herbivores. So red-leaved plants get a little protection from ultraviolet light and send a warning to leaf-eating pests, but they lose a bit of photosynthetic efficiency in dimmer light.
Botanists have been wondering about red versus green leaves for the past 200 years and there is still much research to be done in this arena. So you are in good company, Paul
 
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