A seed hermied and cross pollinated my crop, can i use the seeds??? Help!!!

growone

Well-Known Member
they're a feminized hybrid G13 x AH, i believe they would be F1's, i think the 2 parents are IBL's
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
Thank you for the replys! Ive popped a few and they are growing nicely ive got to wait another 5 weeks before i cannput them in the flower room. The plant that hermied by the way came from regular seeds, i had 3 doublegum from whitelabel. All 3 germed and grew inro females the shortest one of the 3 hermied possibly through the pots being too small? I culled all of them but kept cutting off the 2 that didnt hermie and they are in flower now, fingers crossed and no sign of balls. Ive got 3weeks left so hopefully im safe from the trannys this time round!!

It doesn't matter if the original female plants came from regular or feminized seeds.
If they were female and then produced male flowers, they are not real hermaphrodites. If they were female and produced male flowers they are monoecious hermaphrodites. That means they only have girl genes (XX) and can not be real hermaphrodites. Real hermaphrodites are dioecious (XY).

Every female cannabis plant has the ability to produce male flowers. It is a normal and natural survival mechanism.

Some varieties are finicky and show male flowers with the slightest stress. Most varieties need a combination of stressors to produce male flowers.

Most of the time male flowers show, it is the grower's fault.
 

danky supreme

Well-Known Member
This seems to be an old thread but i have a good amount of experience on this subject. I had a blue cheese that was a hermi nightmare and absolutely destroyed my crop...thousands of seeds. In the end, i had a blue cheese x super lemon haze that turned out nice with absolutely no sign of hermaphrodism. On another run i had a casey jones slightly hermi and polinate 3 different strains. I ran 20 of these seeds from these three different crosses and once again not one male flower on any of them. I would be alittle hesitant to run seeds from a self pollination, but unless im extremely lucky you should be fine. Its my theory that the hermi problem associated with fems is due to inbreeding.
 

danky supreme

Well-Known Member
In addition, these plants had to deal with a high amount of heat and absolutely killed it, my holy grail kush x casey jones(which i named Indiana Jones) was one of the most ridiculously resinous plants i have grown.
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
This seems to be an old thread but i have a good amount of experience on this subject. I had a blue cheese that was a hermi nightmare and absolutely destroyed my crop...thousands of seeds. In the end, i had a blue cheese x super lemon haze that turned out nice with absolutely no sign of hermaphrodism. On another run i had a casey jones slightly hermi and polinate 3 different strains. I ran 20 of these seeds from these three different crosses and once again not one male flower on any of them. I would be alittle hesitant to run seeds from a self pollination, but unless im extremely lucky you should be fine. Its my theory that the hermi problem associated with fems is due to inbreeding.
:wall:

Fems can not produce real hermaphrodites. Your theory is a myth.


Inbreeding or selfing plants is not anything like inbreeding with vertebrates. It is done all the time. Most varieties have been back crossed at some point.

The "hermie problem associated with fems" is due to grower error. Plants from feminized seeds are as likely to "hermie" as plants from regular seeds. A female plant does not have a Y chromosome which is needed for a real hermaphrodite.

All female plants have the ability to produce male flowers. It is a natural and normal survival mechanism. That does not make them hermaphrodites.


There are varieties that are very finnicky and prone to producing male flowers. When it happens to a plant from a regular seed no one freaks out and says regular seeds are likely to "hermie."
 

danky supreme

Well-Known Member
Well regardless of its a myth or not my results speak for themselves. Not one fem seed that i have grown from a self pollination has produced a single male flower...cant say the same from fems bought from breeders. Like i said bro it is a theory, no need to knoxk ur head against the wall about it.
 

homebrew420

Well-Known Member
I don't believe its as easy as that. There have been documented fem seeds turning out true males. Icmag has anumber of them.

As for the seeds in question? Be ready to ditch them if they begin to show signs of intersex traits. Good luck

Peace
 

bass4rent

Member
This might be a stress problem. if it was low under the canopy getting lower light this could be why only that branch was hermie. There are strains that grow full male and female branches naturally at the same time all the time its just the genetics.
 

danky supreme

Well-Known Member
I think its kinda splitting hairs to break down what constitutes a "real" hermaphrodite. Bottom line is there is something about the breeding process used by many companies that makes fems more prone to push out both male and female parts. I dont think most growers will care if their fem has X or Y chromosomes when their garden is loaded with seeds. And yes true males have been discovered from fem seeds.
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
I think its kinda splitting hairs to break down what constitutes a "real" hermaphrodite.
Some say cucumbers taste better pickled.

Bottom line is there is something about the breeding process used by many companies that makes fems more prone to push out both male and female parts.
You do not know what you are talking about.

I dont think most growers will care if their fem has X or Y chromosomes when their garden is loaded with seeds.
Feminized seeds do not have a Y chromosome.

And yes true males have been discovered from fem seeds.
You are confused again and spreading lies based on the experiences of crappy growers.
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
Bottom line is there is something about the breeding process used by many companies that makes fems more prone to push out both male and female parts.
So then chill and stop lying.
 

danky supreme

Well-Known Member
These are my experiences i have better things to do than spread lies on a weed site. I dont even have a computer i do this from my phone which is far from easy.
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
You are lying about stuff that is not a part of your experiences.
So chill and stop spreading lies.
 

bass4rent

Member
You both make me angry and remind me of the reasons why I don't spend much time on this site.
2,310 posts how many are of you just repeating and annoying, relax and start posting something useful trousers I see you post that you think he's lying great great we get it thanks. And mr Danky back up your statements a bit more, I as well do feel that fem seeds more often show male flowers in bud if stressed from my own experience I feel that reg seeds are often a safer choice for growers who are new or that are going to grow in less desirable conditions. I have bought fem seeds and ended up with a plant that physically showed only male flowers was it genetically a male? who knows. With that said even some reg strains will be less or more prone to this behaviour just do some research.
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
You both make me angry and remind me of the reasons why I don't spend much time on this site. 2,310 posts how many are of you just repeating and annoying, relax and start posting something useful trousers

Search my posts. If you could see my private messages you would see how many people I have helped make feminized seeds. You only see what you choose to see.


I see you post that you think he's lying great great we get it thanks.
okay

And mr Danky back up your statements a bit more, I as well do feel that fem seeds more often show male flowers in bud if stressed
Why are plants from feminized seeds more likely to produce male flowers? It does not stand up logically.
A female plant from a regular seed is just as likely to produce male flowers under stress as a plant from a feminized seed.
Stress is not passed down in DNA. Hormonal changes are not passed down via DNA.



from my own experience I feel that reg seeds are often a safer choice for growers who are new or that are going to grow in less desirable conditions.
That is your opinion. I would suggest that new growers not listen to your baseless opinions and go ahead and use feminized seeds.

I have bought fem seeds and ended up with a plant that physically showed only male flowers was it genetically a male? who knows.
If it was a male then it could not have come from a feminized seed. Feminized seeds do not have a Y chromosome.

With that said even some reg strains will be less or more prone to this behaviour just do some research.
It is odd you want me to do research when you hold opinions that can not be true.

If you grew a feminized seed and it produced male flowers it was most likely your fault.
 

stonerloner822

New Member
The last time I grew outdoors with my father (R.I.P.) we had 300 white widdow planted from fem. seeds and 30 hermied. We ended up with the whole crop crosspollinated, and my dad, well the crazy s.o.b. harvested it and we smoked it i couldnt believe i got a decent buzz, but he also reused the seeds and i guess he got several males idk i joined the army and was stationed in gauge town new brunswick for that one.
 
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