Male reveg

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Well I guess we've proven that male plants are no more difficult to reveg than female plants.

All new growth. It's still just in the same 1.75 liter pot of coco. What's interesting is that the new leaves don't have the oddity the plant had before. Now I'm debating keeping it inside under 18/6 light or letting it stay outside and go back into flower naturally. I'll probably take a couple clones and nurse them along until I start back up indoors towards the end of the summer and then use that to pollinate the previous batch made with this male.

I don't have any real goal other than to recreate the odd leaf structure consistently in seed form which is doubtful. I just spent years on an IBL so I guess this will be my next years long project. I like this kind of stuff and it's what keeps me growing.

 

Moflow

Well-Known Member
Well my attempted re veg doesn't appear to be working.
It looks like it's dying off.
Maybe 24 hours indoor lighting could've reversed it
It's throwing bananas again.
It's outside under terrible conditions weather wise. No sun to speak of, cloudy, windy, cool and rain.
20220630_182908.jpg20220630_182833.jpg20220630_182847.jpg

Iĺl try revegging another male I have of Kings Banner in around 3 weeks or so when it drops it's pollen.
If the weather doesn't pick up I'll see if I can fit it indoors somewhere.
 

Attachments

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Status as of 07/07/2022.

The male revegged successfully and is throwing out 5 bladed leaves. I'll probably take a couple of clones and put them back inside in the veg tent under 18/6 and use them later after I start the indoor flower tent back up.

 

Moflow

Well-Known Member
Well as my Malawi male was still producing small flowers after I removed them all the first time I decided to cut them all off again and the plant 'appears' to be revegging outdoors. Fingers crossed.....
20220718_130339.jpg20220718_130346.jpg
 
Top