Mutant Seed-Two Plants-One Retard

Hey all, I've been growing palm trees and veggies for a long time but relatively new to growing bud. This is my first post but I think it should be a good one(just wait til the seedlings). I got a plant from my buddy in mid-May that was about a foot or so tall. It was in his backyard with about 100 unknown origin seeds in some crappy thick clay soil. Now about two months later in FF Ocean Forest soil I'd say its doing good at over 3 feet and two days into flowering and its def female. This plant has been to hell and back but my main question is, does this plant look behind? Thin? Lacking?

Now on to the mutant seed!!! I got 6 seeds from another friend who grows, most likely Blue Cheese. I used the damp paper towel method to germinate and got 2 of the 6 to open up. Here is the weird part, the first seed put out 2 plants! Not one root ball and two plants, two completely separate plants. The seed germinated in 3-4 days and both seedlings had branching roots with root hairs already growing in. One plant grew in normal with both cotyledons, the second had one large seed leaf instead of two smaller ones. It started growing like it was half a plant with two leaves at 90 degrees and nothing on the other side. After about a week I cut the the large seed leaf off bc it continued growing retarded and now after two weeks it seems like it might start growing in normal. Has any one EVER heard of one seed putting out two separate plants?

And one final question. Does anyone think there is a problem with growing outdoor during the day and indoor at night? I put my seedlings out around 9am and bring them in around 8pm when the sun is almost out of sight. And then they go under two 24watt t5 fluorescent grow lights until around midnight. That's 14-15 hours of light total which makes 9-10 hours dark.
 

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phyzix

Well-Known Member
A seed may produce multiple viable plants, although it's somewhat uncommon.

There is no problem with switching from outdoors to indoor, just make sure they have a steady light schedule to avoid stress.
 
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