sexing early and clones?

hossfield

Well-Known Member
hey, i was just wondering if i go 12 on 12 off to flower and determine sex, can i clip a clone and move clones and bring them back into veg if i do it early enough? or once they start gettin them sex organs is it to late to go back to veg even if i clip clones from them
 

skunkmaster6967

Active Member
You can most certainly put your plants back into veg after you sex them. Thats actually one of the best ways to go about it so your not taking up valuable grow space just to find out later down the road that half of them are males. After you put them in veg clone them to fill the rest of your room with beautiful females.

Happy smoking,
:leaf:Skunkmaster:leaf:
 

shunkan

Active Member
i would wait until plants are mature, then 12/12, gather clones, kill any males and start another grow with the clones. but thats me.......
 

mogie

Well-Known Member
Preflowers, as opposed to full blown flowers, generally appear after the fourth week of vegetative growth from seed. Check carefully above the fourth node. Please note that preflowers are very small and and almost impossible to differentiate without magnification. A photographer's 10x loupe is handy indeed when examining preflowers.

As the images below demonstrate, the female preflower is pear shaped and produces a pair of pistils. Frequently, the female preflowers do not show pistils until well after the preflowers have emerged. Thus, don't yank a plant because it has no pistils. Pistillate preflowers are located at the node between the stipule and emerging branch.

Also, some female preflowers never produce pistils. A female preflower without pistils is difficult to distinguish from a male preflower. Thus, hermaphodite issues should not be resolved by the appearance of preflowers, without pistils, on a plant otherwise believed to be a female.

Female (pistillate)



Image courtesy of MrIto

Female (pistillate)


Image courtesy of Uncle Ben

The male preflower may be described as a "ball on a stick." However, its most recognizable feature is its absence of pistils. Sometimes, a male plant will develop mature staminate flowers after prolonged periods of vegetative growth. These appear in clusters around the nodes.

The following image shows a male plant in early flowering. Staminate flowers are located at the node between the stipule and emerging branch.

Male (staminate)
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Image courtesy of PLAYn

Image courtesy of PsycoXul
 
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