danger monkey
Member
hey evverbuddy.
Just wanted to note a mistake I almost made that others might want to be aware of. I have a little berry ryder that is way overdue probably because of cold temps and I went to examine the trics of the disappointing buds and did it under a little 20x microscope lighted from below with an incandescent. Well, with just that incandescent back lighting, just about all the trics looked pretty amber, to the the point that I almost immediately cut it and cursed my whole grow. But the plant overall looked young to me and I went to the trouble of finding a neutral led flashlight and lit it from the top, and low and behold they were are all actually crystal clear. Now it's been out in the sun for another week and a half and the buds are twice as full and just starting to cloud. So you really have to have the right lighting when you're examining trics if you're making decisions based on that. I'm sure it's only newbies like me that wouldn't realize this, but I thought it was worth mentioning.
Just wanted to note a mistake I almost made that others might want to be aware of. I have a little berry ryder that is way overdue probably because of cold temps and I went to examine the trics of the disappointing buds and did it under a little 20x microscope lighted from below with an incandescent. Well, with just that incandescent back lighting, just about all the trics looked pretty amber, to the the point that I almost immediately cut it and cursed my whole grow. But the plant overall looked young to me and I went to the trouble of finding a neutral led flashlight and lit it from the top, and low and behold they were are all actually crystal clear. Now it's been out in the sun for another week and a half and the buds are twice as full and just starting to cloud. So you really have to have the right lighting when you're examining trics if you're making decisions based on that. I'm sure it's only newbies like me that wouldn't realize this, but I thought it was worth mentioning.