Friend's plants damaged in storm. Needs help!

hall420

Member
a friend of mine on the east coast was affected by a really bad storm. of the 4 plants he had, only 1 survived. i'm really bummed for him and he wants to know if it's to late to germinate and start over. I mean would he be able to get somewhat ok yeilds considering it's augest?, he's not looking for a lot. Of course this is an outdoor grow by the way. thanks for the help guys, i didn't know what to tell him i don't know too much about outdoor growing.
 

Smrt

Active Member
We need info in order to steer you in the right direction. But off the top of my head, take a few cuttings if he wants to keep it goin indoors. And really theres not much you can do but let it be. It WILL finish if its not damaged to the point of no return. More info might yield you more responses.
 

Brimi

Well-Known Member
You can tie up a broken plant - even tape a stick on the side of the stem where it's broken. You can use the paper tape they sell for covering stuff when painting.
 

hall420

Member
We need info in order to steer you in the right direction. But off the top of my head, take a few cuttings if he wants to keep it goin indoors. And really theres not much you can do but let it be. It WILL finish if its not damaged to the point of no return. More info might yield you more responses.
thanks for the answer man. yea he has 1 plant that is still ok, and possibliy another one that might make it, but it's severly water damaged though. I told him to transplant it and surround it with lights to dry it, I don't know if that is gonna help but he was really upset so I just told him to do that. Would it be possible for him to start over this late? Could he grow a plant and produce an alright amount of bud by october or early november. Keep in mind he's on the east coast.
 

Spanishfly

Well-Known Member
I have had collapsed brances before - I fixed a line up above them and tied them to that. Sap was still getting through, and I got a good harvest in due course.
 
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