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MasterGrower11
- 25
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I will jus give me some time I'm in first week of floweringNo. Flowering time does not decrease. Show us a 6 week fully finished flower.
I will jus give me some time I'm in first week of floweringNo. Flowering time does not decrease. Show us a 6 week fully finished flower.
Exactly, growers who have never seen it done, will judge you no matter what you tell them.I've always found that when you care about what you do, you do it better. Does it takes 8 or 13 weeks? Perfection lies in the eye of the beholder. And experience will be its judge.
LOL don't be a hater, grow smarter.yah - too many red flags here.
I will jus give me some time I'm in first week of flowering
I don't have any pics atm, like I said you keep counting the days till I come back here, then you would be surprised.What about the last grow?
Exactly, growers who have never seen it done, will judge you no matter what you tell them.
Trust me I have done a 9 week flowering, I barley see any difference when I cut them at 7. The quality is perfect, spend more time knowing your plants will give you more experience. If I grow another strain I would struggle alot.Lol. I know quite a few growing this cut.
He said 8 or 13 weeks. We are talking about 6. Plenty of shitty cash crop growers have to cut at 8. But the weed sucks. They do it for time/ money management. Not quality flowers. 6 weeks for GG4 is silly.
I don't have any pics atm, like I said you keep counting the days till I come back here, then you would be surprised.
70 to 80 percent then you are ready to cut.The general rule of thumb, excluding personal preferences, I've found is that when the trichomes begin to turn brownish, aka amber. This signifies that the trichomes have reached the end of their effective cycle and about to stop producing.
Trust me I have done a 9 week flowering, I barley see any difference when I cut them at 7. The quality is perfect, spend more time knowing your plants will give you more experience. If I grow another strain I would struggle alot.
The general rule of thumb, excluding personal preferences, I've found is that when the trichomes begin to turn brownish, aka amber. This signifies that the trichomes have reached the end of their effective cycle and about to stop producing.
Agreed. I'm just sayin' that's the point to look for to pull in general wisdom.Only when the flower is truly done growing is there any reason to start looking at trichomes.
Possibly a discrepancy between "total plant weight" and 'product weight'. I've grown four pound plants, with only ~4oz of quality bud.
Having played games over the internet, I know there is the guy willing to lie cheat and steal. I'm just clarifying, cataloging, and verifying in my own mind as to how this works. He's not the first to make a unsupportable claim except in certain "views". It's for me, unfortunately, to understand their insanity. Just dealing with reality as it comes at me.