smacksjack
Member
Hey RIU-ers,
Okay - so I have a Dairy Queen and a Third Dimension, TGA Subcool
Growing in soil, organic nutes, 5 gal pots, ph'd water, LST grow with screen, 2' 4-tube T5HO with 3 supplemental CFL's, etc. etc.
Not important.
My main question is this: I am approaching my breeder's harvest window for both of my plants, but I put them through a shit load of stress over the course of this grow. None hermied on me (thank god), but I think it has set me behind schedule...
I have heard that always add a week or so (while monitoring trichs) to the breeder's schedule regardless of stress...and I have also heard if you do a heavy prune...add another week or so.
For example, week 2 of flowering I was like "hmm, maybe I should prune for the first time the entire grow" and snipped off like a handful of leaves and shit. In week 4 of flowering...my humidity spiked and I needed to really prune my girls back to cool my box down, so I took the lower 1/3 of the plant (as is suggested to do anyway) all off at once.
Immediately after the prune, the girls reaaaaaaaaalllllllllllyyyyyyyyy slowed down. So my question is how long should I tack on to the grow???
Or...is this a total myth?
Estimated time would be preferred. I am also monitoring trichomes and it looks like it still needs some time. Like some cloudy, a lot clear, and no amber. I am shooting for 90% cloudy to harvest.
Thanks RIU-ers!
Smacks.
![3D2 (2).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887270-ccc9a472e0565705bb47e440404aa4ac.jpg)
![3D2 (3).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887271-217709e054125347d054c24ca4dd5d4c.jpg)
![3D2 (4).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887274-e0b982aa9cdbbbd1869b03c34019612e.jpg)
![DQ2 (1).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887276-71490c3b555f1ce73cc31b27d3d8a18a.jpg)
![DQ2 (2).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887281-9da107f5656b54d1322bda211d5e1e67.jpg)
![DQ2 (4).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887283-a983f2b6a14b8681658f39af1c921b3a.jpg)
The 3D are the first 3 images, and the DQ are the second. Grown short with LST due to space issues.
Okay - so I have a Dairy Queen and a Third Dimension, TGA Subcool
Growing in soil, organic nutes, 5 gal pots, ph'd water, LST grow with screen, 2' 4-tube T5HO with 3 supplemental CFL's, etc. etc.
Not important.
My main question is this: I am approaching my breeder's harvest window for both of my plants, but I put them through a shit load of stress over the course of this grow. None hermied on me (thank god), but I think it has set me behind schedule...
I have heard that always add a week or so (while monitoring trichs) to the breeder's schedule regardless of stress...and I have also heard if you do a heavy prune...add another week or so.
For example, week 2 of flowering I was like "hmm, maybe I should prune for the first time the entire grow" and snipped off like a handful of leaves and shit. In week 4 of flowering...my humidity spiked and I needed to really prune my girls back to cool my box down, so I took the lower 1/3 of the plant (as is suggested to do anyway) all off at once.
Immediately after the prune, the girls reaaaaaaaaalllllllllllyyyyyyyyy slowed down. So my question is how long should I tack on to the grow???
Or...is this a total myth?
Estimated time would be preferred. I am also monitoring trichomes and it looks like it still needs some time. Like some cloudy, a lot clear, and no amber. I am shooting for 90% cloudy to harvest.
Thanks RIU-ers!
Smacks.
![](/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fasset2.rollitup.org%2Fsmilies%2Fweed.gif&hash=2dd9baa08beef6f01b334245cf12c622)
![3D2 (2).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887270-ccc9a472e0565705bb47e440404aa4ac.jpg)
![3D2 (3).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887271-217709e054125347d054c24ca4dd5d4c.jpg)
![3D2 (4).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887274-e0b982aa9cdbbbd1869b03c34019612e.jpg)
![DQ2 (1).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887276-71490c3b555f1ce73cc31b27d3d8a18a.jpg)
![DQ2 (2).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887281-9da107f5656b54d1322bda211d5e1e67.jpg)
![DQ2 (4).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887283-a983f2b6a14b8681658f39af1c921b3a.jpg)
![DQ2 (5).jpg](/data/attachments/1887/1887284-6e9c261456092ad705d5f78d71879588.jpg)