How do you get second generation outdoor plants?

CANNABIS MADNESS

New Member
I heard that cannabis has one life cycle but I've seen videos of second and third generation plants outdoors how is this possible?
 

racerboy71

bud bootlegger
take clones, and more then likely bring them inside to root and veg for awhile, move back outdoors when weather permits
 

Wicked ReToddDid

Active Member
U can reveg a plant you harvested if you want? Is this what you're asking?
Re-vegging an outdoor plant that is planted in the ground could prove to be tricky, if you had to dig it up and replant in a pot. Going from flower to veg and chopping up the roots is an awful lot of stress all at once.
 

spliffendz

Well-Known Member
How can cannabis have one life cycle, if they naturally make seeds and then them seeds sprout for the next spring?

Maybe I am reading the post wrong...
 

Thecouchlock

Well-Known Member
How can cannabis have one life cycle, if they naturally make seeds and then them seeds sprout for the next spring?

Maybe I am reading the post wrong...
It only grows for one cycle makes offspring and dies off, so the one plant itself dies but like you said the cycle continues.
 

mudballs

Well-Known Member
I heard that cannabis has one life cycle but I've seen videos of second and third generation plants outdoors how is this possible?
can you link to the video?
weed is an annual (germs in spring,grows in summer, seeds in fall then dies) and not perennial (goes dormant in fall and comes back to continue new growth the next spring).
clones are not a 2nd or 3rd generation, technically speaking they are the exact same generation. outdoor 2nd generation would mean a male pollinated a female that went to seed then died. then those seeds germinate and produce progeny, the next generation.
couchlock is right but i felt the answer needed more details.
 

mr sunshine

Well-Known Member
Re-vegging an outdoor plant that is planted in the ground could prove to be tricky, if you had to dig it up and replant in a pot. Going from flower to veg and chopping up the roots is an awful lot of stress all at once.
You don't have to take it out of the ground you just need extra light and you gotta make sure they don't freeze. .All it is ,is reveging.leave a few branches put it back under a veg light cycle and give it time!!
 
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THE KONASSURE

Well-Known Member
you can cut the top buds off a plant and then spray it with GA3

and hope it don`t hemi or stretch so much that its useless

then it will grow new branches and leaf`s and then it normally carries on flowering a bit of triacontanol 1 to 6 weeks after the ga3 normally helps them flower more
 

TheYokel

Well-Known Member
Cross cannabis and tulips and you would get an annual flower #highdeas :bigjoint::bigjoint: Lol
Cannalips.

I heard that cannabis has one life cycle but I've seen videos of second and third generation plants outdoors how is this possible?
Outdoor plants have a tendency to hermie easier than indoor plants. They just live a more stressful life. Even an all-female field will still produce a few seeds in a few plants. And some growers purposely leave a few males in a corner of the field to pollinate a couple plants in the edge of the crop. You need a lot of seeds every year to grow big outdoor crops. Those seeds would be second generation plants from whatever they came from.
 

Wicked ReToddDid

Active Member
You don't have to take it out of the ground you just need extra light and you gotta make sure they don't freeze. .All it is ,is reveging.leave a few branches put it back under a veg light cycle and give it time!!
I assumed the OP lived in a cooler area. I'm in New England and we see bitter cold winters. There is no chance an annual plant would survive unless brought indoors. Your assessment is otherwise correct, it could remain outdoors if it was given more light to veg.
 

TheYokel

Well-Known Member
I assumed the OP lived in a cooler area. I'm in New England and we see bitter cold winters. There is no chance an annual plant would survive unless brought indoors. Your assessment is otherwise correct, it could remain outdoors if it was given more light to veg.
That would technically just be a second year plant though... it would still be the same generation.
 

BWG707

Well-Known Member
I've witnessed outdoor plants go through two flower seasons in Nor Cal. It was a mild winter and no extra lighting was used. The flowers it produced the second year were smaller and not as dense for some reason but the potentcy was there.
 
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