ONE single seed in female plants!?!?!?!

JJ05

Well-Known Member
Hey crew, this is the first harvest I encountered this! I have 3 Blueberry Gums, 3 Blue OGs 1 Purple Pineberry and 1 C99...ANYWAYS Im a few days into my harvest/processing and while cleaning up my buds I noticed I found ONE seed in 4 out of 8 of my females so far. Still working on the other 4 so I dont know until I get into them. Well while cleaning the 4 I found a seed 2 out of 3 Blueberry Gums and 2 out of 3 Blue OG. Its literally ONE SEED on the entire plant. Very mature seeds aswell, literally brown with huge tiger stripes. I do not notice any hermie traits and as far as I know no one is growing around me. Is it possible the plants produced 1 single seed as a last change to survive/preserve its genes since it was reaching the end of its life cycle? If so, will they be feminized seeds?
 

JJ05

Well-Known Member
Yes to all your questions.

For the most part I've found that all of my plants have produced one seed at minimum. And yes they have all been primarily fem.
Amazing! Do you think it will look like the plant it came from, kinda like a clone in seed form if you will?
 

Freda Felcher

Well-Known Member
Amazing! Do you think it will look like the plant it came from, kinda like a clone in seed form if you will?
I had this happen last fall with some feminized Connie Chung from DNA. They produced just a couple seeds, i planted those seeds this spring and they were all fem and look to be on track to harvest in another week or two with similar results as last year.
 

ULEN

Well-Known Member
IMO the new seeds get acclimated to the surrounding much better than the original seed. But yeah it will be pretty much the same plant.
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
Unless you have a male plant to which you fertilized your females,
then the male pollen has come from un known sources,
and is best treated as foreign as such a herm, or undesirable

making seeds is yet another chapter in the adventurer of growing
and is vital that any attempts at making seeds
is done with the correct plants and techniques
 

aznight

Well-Known Member
Unless you have a male plant to which you fertilized your females,
then the male pollen has come from un known sources,
and is best treated as foreign as such a herm, or undesirable

making seeds is yet another chapter in the adventurer of growing
and is vital that any attempts at making seeds
is done with the correct plants and techniques
A stressed plant can produce male traits no?

You can force one part of the plant to turn male by spraying colloidal silver right when its flowering? im not too familiar with the process but i've done it before in the past

So that way the pollen from that branch or piece has all female characteristics, which in the long run produces plants that also have semi-hermi traits?

that seed will now maybe produce a little female pollen just so it can produce another female seed or two. just my theory =)

Sorta GMO
 

JJ05

Well-Known Member
I figured if it came in contact it would surly make more than ONE SEED. I had males in the past pollinate plants and they were just riddeled in seeds. Literally one seed, so far on all of my Blueberry Gums and one of my Blue Ogs. So I have 4 seeds now. I wonder if its a g 13 labs thing? No complaints here!
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
A stressed plant can produce male traits no?
Yes we cal lit a herm a hermaphrodite, either an established female growing out male flowers or visa versa

You can force one part of the plant to turn male by spraying colloidal silver right when its flowering? im not too familiar with the process but i've done it before in the past
You have done it but didn't understand what you were doing...thats helpful?

Understand from 101 hermies are bad, many members, and I will advise you to remove hermies on site, unless you are indeed attempting to feminize a plant with colloidal silver or other tonics
 

aznight

Well-Known Member
A stressed plant can produce male traits no?
Yes we cal lit a herm a hermaphrodite, either an established female growing out male flowers or visa versa

You can force one part of the plant to turn male by spraying colloidal silver right when its flowering? im not too familiar with the process but i've done it before in the past
You have done it but didn't understand what you were doing...thats helpful?

Understand from 101 hermies are bad, many members, and I will advise you to remove hermies on site, unless you are indeed attempting to feminize a plant with colloidal silver or other tonics
I've done my research no need to be a douche.. and i wasnt asking any questions...

Yes i have done it, and people have used colloidol silver before too but that doesnt mean that it is a hermie AND that doesnt mean they UNDERSTAND what they are doing.

Do you think that this process was researched by scientists and know the complete process?

I dont think so.. so how would i know...


so... i was wondering, have you grown anything yourself?

Im looking in your "grow journal" and all i see is cited references

that kelp nute feed does NOT look organic... your using processed "roasted" seaweed...
Did you really use this on your plants?
 
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Organicpoop

Well-Known Member
played out clones will produce seeds.
They want to survive.

They are smarter then humans that don't want to survive.

Cannabis tissue culture is the way to work that out.

I am drunk and sleep in a garden with dogs.
I do not wish to be cloned.

I am played out.
 

FresnoFarmer

Well-Known Member
I have been finding one or two seeds per plant lately. I think one of these paisas around here has male plants. Dipshit,
 

aznight

Well-Known Member
played out clones will produce seeds.
They want to survive.

They are smarter then humans that don't want to survive.

Cannabis tissue culture is the way to work that out.

I am drunk and sleep in a garden with dogs.
I do not wish to be cloned.

I am played out.
LOL i feel the same for myself, haven't discovered any seeds yet but its the worst plant out of all and its near the neighbors small, weak looking plants...
 

IvyPirate

Well-Known Member
Almost every plant I have grown made between 1 and 5 seeds (that I found); I read one time it is common for a non-pollinated plant to make a few seeds as a natural method of propagating/cloning. My current indica plant came from a third generation seed (the seed came from a plant last year which came from a seed from a plant the year before). If I recall correctly, all of the plants grown from seeds from previous females turned out to be female. I just consider it good luck that I can easily replenish my seed stock from year to year.
 
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