Thanks. Not much in the way of pre-flowers. Im ready to take a couple out of the tent to be honest - vegged too much. I was messing around with a some LST stuff that i wanted to grow out and they got a little too big; i also broke one in half that i grew back out which added time to everything. Anyway, yesterday was the first day they officially went into bloom (12/12) but i've been reducing the number of hours of light by around 45 minutes each day for almost 2 weeks. I use Humboldt nutes, the organic line. Kind of a pain in the ass to brew every 3 days but the plants seem to like them. Here's a couple older pics of the plants (they are in the dark right now, ill put some updated ones out in a day or so) and what the food looks like when ready to feed (after ~24hrs of brewing).
And some older pics (first 2 are 8/6, then 8/14, 8/15, most recent pics are above):
Day 8 Bloom: Not a whole lot of difference. Males are out, 6 girls left to play with. Some hairs and some more height....Put the HPS on em but need a bigger tent. Water only two days ago - with 1.5 tsp of indo bat guano/pot added as a top feed about 80% of the way through the watering. They also got hit with their last application of Nitrozyme (as foliage feed) at lights off today. They're already very stinky plants! Kerosine type smell - the good kind.
Bloom Day 10: Still not much change. Wouldn't mind if they would stop stretching/growing and really get to flowering....Anyone have a good recommendation for something organic to take care of a fungus gnat problem?
Bloom D12:
Some hairs coming in. Still stretching some. Have a little gnat problem - very little, haven't seen any in two days, so hopefully they are gone. Got neem oil and the yellow sticky things in the pictures.
Bloom D13:
Seeing a little pop in their flowering. Got slight tip burn on a few after giving them water only last feeding which i find a bit strange - unless the guano from a couple weeks ago is starting to come alive? Anyway, tying some of the bigger branches back, pruning the lower 1/4 or so of the plants and that's about it.