TimeLine
- 148
- 43
I had a sativa that had several humungous 15 finger leaves. I'm told thats pretty unusual. I never see more than 9 indoor. But the photoperiod is longer indoor than outdoor. So is it genetic?
Okay so I'm having an issue with this as well ,I had taken clones from my girls that were 3 days into flower ,all threw out the rerooting process they were dialed in when I planted them they were dialed in suffered virtually no stress (growing in botanicare coco) they rooted fast btw but they were in 9 oz red cups for about 2 weeks to develop and did fine producing 5 an 7 fingered leaves all green ....then from my previous grow I had coco that I flushed that had flowering nuits in it from 3 waterings (pH 5.8, water temp is 73°F ,ppms are at 1100 room temp 75°F 18 hours light 6 dark ) using 6 bulb T-5 hood ,but last week for no dang reason the leaves just started producing 3 fingered leaves then down to one fingered leaves theyre ending their 4th week of veg in 5 days why now all of a sudden would they do this ? Theyre healthy as shit tho I flushed the previous coco from the old flower nuits checked the run off none of what you people are saying makes sense none of my other females have done this ever my lights are not messed up either
Cannabis is photoperiodic.
That means that it is the period or duration of lighting phase by which it "knows" whether to grow leaves (vegetative phase) or flowers (regenerative or sexual phase). These growth characteristics are controlled by hormones that are switched on or off by light, and these hormones are what tell the plant whether it should be growing leaves or flowers. It is not the daylight period that induces changes, but the dark period that controls this.
If you have a plant that has gone into flower and the dark phase is interrupted by sufficient light (moonlight is not enough to induce), by as little as a couple of minutes, it *will* cause the plant to go back into vegetative phase.
This growth has a distinct appearance, beginning with the plant growing triple-lobed leaves, often that don't have the normal serrations, which then become singles, then goes back to triples, and finally normally lobed leaves. Little to no bud growth will occur during this period.
Each phase change takes about two weeks for the plant to work through. So if you've got a plant in flower and you see it's started to throw triple-lobed leaves instead of the normal 5, 7, 9 or 11, you know that something has caused it to go back into a vegetative phase, aka reveg. If your plan is to get it back into flowering, know that the whole process will take approximately 6 weeks to get through before you see normal growth again.
I have found that reducing an 18hr lighting photoperiod by as little as an hour can induce flowering, but interrupting it for as little as 15 minutes 1x/night is enough to stop this. This is *not* the same thing as when a rootbound plant begins throwing pistils.
I have not played around a whole lot with photoperiods outside using a reduced daylight (reduced by 1/2hr each day) during flowering and stopped when I hit an 8hr day, so if there are others who've played a bit with photoperiods and what their effects are with other observations, I think this is the place to put them.
[/QUOTE
Your plant se
Plant is getting stressed someway...weather it be shitty ph or improper or inconsistent light...if not corrected you will get a below average yeild...Cannabis is photoperiodic.
That means that it is the period or duration of lighting phase by which it "knows" whether to grow leaves (vegetative phase) or flowers (regenerative or sexual phase). These growth characteristics are controlled by hormones that are switched on or off by light, and these hormones are what tell the plant whether it should be growing leaves or flowers. It is not the daylight period that induces changes, but the dark period that controls this.
If you have a plant that has gone into flower and the dark phase is interrupted by sufficient light (moonlight is not enough to induce), by as little as a couple of minutes, it *will* cause the plant to go back into vegetative phase.
This growth has a distinct appearance, beginning with the plant growing triple-lobed leaves, often that don't have the normal serrations, which then become singles, then goes back to triples, and finally normally lobed leaves. Little to no bud growth will occur during this period.
Each phase change takes about two weeks for the plant to work through. So if you've got a plant in flower and you see it's started to throw triple-lobed leaves instead of the normal 5, 7, 9 or 11, you know that something has caused it to go back into a vegetative phase, aka reveg. If your plan is to get it back into flowering, know that the whole process will take approximately 6 weeks to get through before you see normal growth again.
I have found that reducing an 18hr lighting photoperiod by as little as an hour can induce flowering, but interrupting it for as little as 15 minutes 1x/night is enough to stop this. This is *not* the same thing as when a rootbound plant begins throwing pistils.
I have not played around a whole lot with photoperiods outside using a reduced daylight (reduced by 1/2hr each day) during flowering and stopped when I hit an 8hr day, so if there are others who've played a bit with photoperiods and what their effects are with other observations, I think this is the place to put them.
My girls doin this currently. Im debating moving her from 3 gal to 5 gal (but idk bout four plants inna 5 gal inna 4x4!) or i may go with the major trim option. Trying to keep her potential yield up as much as possible til the other 3 have been vegging bout 2 months total but shes rarin 2 go now haha. BUT evrn if i move her to 5 gal guess that dont mean ive gotta move the other three to 5 gals. Hmmm... Also i may be the only one in the world who fkn hates smartpots...Isn't Triangle Kush another name for The White? My cut of The White never did that during veg, only when revegging.
I have only seen that when I had soil that was way too acidic, and at that time I was observing other weird problems as well, really bad lockouts and shit.
You know, I really don't know *why* root bound plants tend to go into flower, I only know that the smaller the container the more likely they are to go into flower, and when put in flower they will finish more quickly. I wish I had a definitive answer on why, but what I do when I see it is I get that girl repotted. If she's in the biggest size pot I can physically handle (3gals for me), then the green material on top gets whacked down hard, then I go at her roots and whack those down hard. I've take away as much as half the root material (sides & bottom) without causing a problem.
Holy shit thats awesome bruh!I had an interesting re-veg experience recently. I took clones from a plant about two-ish weeks into flower while doing some final lower pruning, and they did the normal curly leaves and big single blades and after a few weeks they're back to 5 blades again (this is not the interesting part).
BUT then, a friend of mine gave me a cutting from very low on his plant, a Rainbow Pie. It was about two weeks from harvest, and it was basically a tiny nug on a stick. I stuck it in a rapid rooter cube and it rooted in a week or so. Planted in a solo cup, and it sat there and did visibly nothing for almost 3 weeks. Then out of nowhere, growth appeared from below the nug, and it grew a new shoot with normal 5 bladed leaves. The shoots in the pic grew in just over a week.
New shoot:
View attachment 884419
Week later:
View attachment 884420
View attachment 884421
You can see a couple of strange round leaves on the lower area in the 2nd pic. Since then I gave her a haircut and removed all the remaining buds.
We got given a clone late (July) I think it's a Northern Light strain, and it's been an outdoor plant. It started off good, 5 - 7 fingers, but now at the top and at the end of the season, it's started growing 3 again. I don't think it reached its full potential, wish I had've found this forum earlier to try and correct it. Weird how this happened at the end of the season.
they call it revegI recently took some cuts from a Chemdog #4 about 2 1/2 weeks into flower. They continued to flower in the dome. They rooted in about 10 days with a flower top beginning to form. After removing and going into the veg room they went weird as hell on me. Some new leaves curled into a circle others only had one leaf, then two, three and finally started to look normal after a few weeks. Now healthy and thriving as if nothing had happened.
This ain’t no reveg. Just some unstable mutation. Three finger leaves from seed.they call it reveg
Yes, I remember a thread where someone said it's common in some of those OG lines, but I haven't seen it in anything I've grown out to this point. In my experience, with the genetics I've run, it's a reveg issue. I see a lot of threads and questions, so I suppose the qualifier is that UNLESS it's one of those OG lines (a list might be helpful so anyone else who wants to add their here, I think it would be helpful to others) it's likely a reveg scenario.
They continued flowering just fine.
I have seen it, absolutely. Thanks for the reminder!
It has to be! At least I think so. Also, I've been told that there are some OG lines that just grow triple-lobed leaves, period. But I've never grown one out myself, so I can't speak to it. Again, however, assuming it's true (and I'm assuming it's true), I think it's gotta be genetic, just as the reveg expression itself likely has a genetic basis I would think.
OK well I've had single leafed plants buy I am not a newbie growing since early sixties but had no I'll effects great for camp lol smell is what gets most crops found and bad trail camp, three can keep a secret if two are DEAD!Cannabis is photoperiodic.
That means that it is the period or duration of lighting phase by which it "knows" whether to grow leaves (vegetative phase) or flowers (regenerative or sexual phase). These growth characteristics are controlled by hormones that are switched on or off by light, and these hormones are what tell the plant whether it should be growing leaves or flowers. It is not the daylight period that induces changes, but the dark period that controls this.
If you have a plant that has gone into flower and the dark phase is interrupted by sufficient light (moonlight is not enough to induce), by as little as a couple of minutes, it *will* cause the plant to go back into vegetative phase.
This growth has a distinct appearance, beginning with the plant growing triple-lobed leaves, often that don't have the normal serrations, which then become singles, then goes back to triples, and finally normally lobed leaves. Little to no bud growth will occur during this period.
Each phase change takes about two weeks for the plant to work through. So if you've got a plant in flower and you see it's started to throw triple-lobed leaves instead of the normal 5, 7, 9 or 11, you know that something has caused it to go back into a vegetative phase, aka reveg. If your plan is to get it back into flowering, know that the whole process will take approximately 6 weeks to get through before you see normal growth again.
I have found that reducing an 18hr lighting photoperiod by as little as an hour can induce flowering, but interrupting it for as little as 15 minutes 1x/night is enough to stop this. This is *not* the same thing as when a rootbound plant begins throwing pistils.
I have not played around a whole lot with photoperiods outside using a reduced daylight (reduced by 1/2hr each day) during flowering and stopped when I hit an 8hr day, so if there are others who've played a bit with photoperiods and what their effects are with other observations, I think this is the place to put them.
The plant has reverted to the vegetative state, I've experienced it myself, from a fully grown 9 fingers leaf to 3 pronged buds, profound effect on the yield, at some point the plant has been exposed to light, during the dark time, I can't stress how important full blackout, save moonlight, is. If you're sure this isn't why, there aren't many other ways for it to revert. Have you changed your lighting mid growth? At 12/12?.Okay so I'm having an issue with this as well ,I had taken clones from my girls that were 3 days into flower ,all threw out the rerooting process they were dialed in when I planted them they were dialed in suffered virtually no stress (growing in botanicare coco) they rooted fast btw but they were in 9 oz red cups for about 2 weeks to develop and did fine producing 5 an 7 fingered leaves all green ....then from my previous grow I had coco that I flushed that had flowering nuits in it from 3 waterings (pH 5.8, water temp is 73°F ,ppms are at 1100 room temp 75°F 18 hours light 6 dark ) using 6 bulb T-5 hood ,but last week for no dang reason the leaves just started producing 3 fingered leaves then down to one fingered leaves theyre ending their 4th week of veg in 5 days why now all of a sudden would they do this ? Theyre healthy as shit tho I flushed the previous coco from the old flower nuits checked the run off none of what you people are saying makes sense none of my other females have done this ever my lights are not messed up either
Looks like my plant.Thought i would post these here.perfectly healthy chemcookie in flower 5 days.but they do this from seed to harvest.i think its strain related
View attachment 502809 View attachment 502810 View attachment 502811
my Chemdog D and Chemdog 91 have the 3 fingered leafs got to be genetics
Same hereCannabis is photoperiodic.
That means that it is the period or duration of lighting phase by which it "knows" whether to grow leaves (vegetative phase) or flowers (regenerative or sexual phase). These growth characteristics are controlled by hormones that are switched on or off by light, and these hormones are what tell the plant whether it should be growing leaves or flowers. It is not the daylight period that induces changes, but the dark period that controls this.
If you have a plant that has gone into flower and the dark phase is interrupted by sufficient light (moonlight is not enough to induce), by as little as a couple of minutes, it *will* cause the plant to go back into vegetative phase.
This growth has a distinct appearance, beginning with the plant growing triple-lobed leaves, often that don't have the normal serrations, which then become singles, then goes back to triples, and finally normally lobed leaves. Little to no bud growth will occur during this period.
Each phase change takes about two weeks for the plant to work through. So if you've got a plant in flower and you see it's started to throw triple-lobed leaves instead of the normal 5, 7, 9 or 11, you know that something has caused it to go back into a vegetative phase, aka reveg. If your plan is to get it back into flowering, know that the whole process will take approximately 6 weeks to get through before you see normal growth again.
I have found that reducing an 18hr lighting photoperiod by as little as an hour can induce flowering, but interrupting it for as little as 15 minutes 1x/night is enough to stop this. This is *not* the same thing as when a rootbound plant begins throwing pistils.
I have not played around a whole lot with photoperiods outside using a reduced daylight (reduced by 1/2hr each day) during flowering and stopped when I hit an 8hr day, so if there are others who've played a bit with photoperiods and what their effects are with other observations, I think this is the place to put them.
Just snapped these pics out of my veg room.
Hells angels OG View attachment 503007
Chemdog 91 skunkVaView attachment 503009
Legend OGView attachment 503032
Triangle KushView attachment 503010
I think that you're onto something, atm I have 4 girls indoors, random strains as they were a freebie, one is Sativa dominant and I'd potent, flowers are producing 3 fingers, while the rest less Sativa, are 5-7, the remarkable thing is the 3 fingers plant is outrageously producing big sticky and stinky buds, seems like they have another 3 weeks till harvest, can't take pictures atm, it's night. I'm truly surprisedLooks like my plant.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?