Not trying to pile on here because I’m just a newbie with a seed buying problem. I have a whole 2 grows under my belt. One of my plants in my first grow fully hermied around week 3 of flower. 1 of the other 2 in that grow threw nanners all through flower. My first thought was to look at the genetics, even though logic pointed at conditions--poor ph stability, challenges with keeping tent zipped during “night”, poor watering practices, poor feeding regimen, etc. Sure seems easy to blame genetics, lack of stress testing, or poor seeds. But I chalked it up to a learning experience and tried to figure out what & how I could do better next time.This is just ridiculous. How many people have successfully grown out the Skunks n Oranges and how were they tested? 2/2 skunks and oranges are total herms. 2/2 of a random landrace cross that I bought directly on IG have hermed. One random chuck I did for fun has 1 ball. The other 12 plants I have are absolutely totally happy. Thanks to everyone chiming in to point the finger at me, really helpful!!
Whether or not @Useful Seeds does extensive stress testing on his gear doesn’t change the fact that feminized seeds are caused by forcing a plant to hermie. Every feminized seed has a chance to be male or hermie instead of fully female. The chance is very low, but it exists. I’d be wary of any breeder claiming otherwise just because they do extensive stress testing.
That said, it seems like your very first experience with growing started back in April of this year...at least to base it on your posts here on RIU. Again, not trying to throw shade, but there may well be shared blame here. Regardless, I’ve seen you take an unnecessarily aggressive stance in several circumstances in your short time on RIU. It may be that your text comes off that way. But it also may be that you just like complaining and aren’t really interested in finding a solution or allowing others to assist.
Either way, @Useful Seeds, being the standup guy he is, offered to replace the seed several posts ago. Either take him up on the offer or don’t. Maybe you’ll be able to replicate the hermie issue and narrow it down to some environmental factors that this genetic combination doesn’t tolerate. Or maybe you’ll find that it doesn’t hermie next time—that the particular fem seed you initially grew was from a shallower part of the gene pool.