I suggest a USB microscope for taking trichome pix. You'll be surprised how much better you can assess harvest ripeness. At least I was. The loupe (or maybe my bad eyes) caused me to miss some peak harvest times.ok- so I got my jewelers loupe today so I can start checking trichomes. It magnifies 30x and 60x i think... Well my question is, is the cloudy appearance super obvious? I dont see any cloudy here, but it also still early.. Just started week 7 of flower.View attachment 3536509View attachment 3536510
Thanks so much Big Steve! You are a damn genius! Would not have considered the background, but I bet that makes all the differenceExcellent question!
The basics -- trichomes appear clear, turn cloudy/milky and eventually turn a burnt-orange color. Most recommend harvesting while the milky tris turn dark. Problem is that early tris are clear and tend to reflect the colors around them. I used to use a 30x jeweler's loupe with tris scraped onto a 3 x 5 white index card. The strong white background had me seeing white/milky tris that were actually clear and reflecting the white background.
So find a neutral background for your 'loopin'. Good luck, BigSteve.
Getting cloudy but its more on the clear side imo, got much more time to bulk up. Also, Flowering time depends on phenotypes,sexual maturity,health & environment. When you look at things like flowering time, you have to look at the 'bigger" picture because there is no right or wrong flowering time unless your growing clones that you know very well in the same setup over and over. With seeds and especially hybrid seeds, forget about flowering time or only use it as a rough guide.ok- so I got my jewelers loupe today so I can start checking trichomes. It magnifies 30x and 60x i think... Well my question is, is the cloudy appearance super obvious? I dont see any cloudy here, but it also still early.. Just started week 7 of flower.View attachment 3536509View attachment 3536510
You'll find a mix of all three later on in the grow. Check the underside of the leaves to get a better view of what's happening. You'll have to go with a majority of what u see. Notice the orange ones will not have a fat and full round head like the clear/milky ones.Excellent question!
The basics -- trichomes appear clear, turn cloudy/milky and eventually turn a burnt-orange color. Most recommend harvesting while the milky tris turn dark. Problem is that early tris are clear and tend to reflect the colors around them. I used to use a 30x jeweler's loupe with tris scraped onto a 3 x 5 white index card. The strong white background had me seeing white/milky tris that were actually clear and reflecting the white background.
So find a neutral background for your 'loopin'. Good luck, BigSteve.