flowering

Hugo Phurst

Well-Known Member
Sorry, can't help.

I call it when I can first see flowers, and I put no stock in, "X" number of days to harvest.
 

T.H.Cammo

Well-Known Member
There is no clock! Each plant does whatever it does when it's good and ready. There is, however, an approximate time frame for flowering each strain. That "Time Frame" starts when visable signs of a change toward flowering takes place, not when you "flip" the light schedual.

Don't count on any part of growing to take a specific number of days, it almost always varies - one way or the other. Get to know your plants, they will always tell you when it's time for a change in the ruetine - you just need to be able to recognize the clues.
 

blaze1camp

Well-Known Member
There is no clock! Each plant does whatever it does when it's good and ready. There is, however, an approximate time frame for flowering each strain. That "Time Frame" starts when visable signs of a change toward flowering takes place, not when you "flip" the light schedual.

Don't count on any part of growing to take a specific number of days, it almost always varies - one way or the other. Get to know your plants, they will always tell you when it's time for a change in the ruetine - you just need to be able to recognize the clues.

very well put
 

Psuedo

Well-Known Member
From what I read they are "sexually mature" when they start showing the pistils. The hairs.
 
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