Nearly done??

idfuckmyplants

Well-Known Member
This is my fastbuds blackberry auto

For some reason I was under the impression she was a 10week strain like my previous auto .

just browsing and apparently breeder says 8 weeks which would be the Monday coming :)

I've checked the trichomes and there's no sign of amber yet and still a bit of clear

was curious what you all thought with regards to her "looking done" ?
&
Do you think she's got much more to give if left a little longer ?

Thanks in advance :)

IMG_3150.JPG
IMG_3153.JPG
IMG_3158.JPG IMG_3167.PNG
 

chemphlegm

Well-Known Member
Cmon now don't tease :O haha

Say she's done yeah ? :)
give you the benefit of the doubt, assume you have tight controls, breeders dont lie to me ever since I been buying seeds. they say 8 weeks and I got solid cloudy at 8 weeks of flower,. my controls are tight. if you suffer the plant any you can expect different results. breeders try hard not to suffer the plants they report on.
cut a small bud dry it smoke it and decide
 

HansBud

Well-Known Member
I'd let her go till day 65 or 70 you'd be surprised how much they fatten up when you leave em my fattest were always 80+ days
 

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member
This is my fastbuds blackberry auto

For some reason I was under the impression she was a 10week strain like my previous auto .

just browsing and apparently breeder says 8 weeks which would be the Monday coming :)

I've checked the trichomes and there's no sign of amber yet and still a bit of clear

was curious what you all thought with regards to her "looking done" ?
&
Do you think she's got much more to give if left a little longer ?

Thanks in advance :)

View attachment 3898291
View attachment 3898292
View attachment 3898293 View attachment 3898294
Ready or not, those are some lovely fucking buds!
 

chemphlegm

Well-Known Member
okay, then say me the keyword
Guttation, and what your seeing is a sap exudate.... At night, transpiration usually does not occur because most plants have their stomata closed. When there is a high soil moisture level, water will enter plant roots, because the water potential of the roots is lower than in the soil solution. The water will accumulate in the plant, creating a slight root pressure. The root pressure forces some water to exude through special leaf tips or edge structures, hydathodes, forming drops. Root pressure provides the impetus for this flow, rather than transpirational ascent. This sap exudate can be clear, tan, brown or even blood red(The red color is due to haematin compounds and anthocyanin pigments that naturally build up in some varieties; The red color may also indicate a nutrient deficiency, notably of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, or magnesium) This sap usually contains a variety of organic and inorganic compounds, mainly sugars, and mineral nutrients, and potassium. Upon drying, a white crust remains on the tissue surface. Guttated sap exudates most commonly exude from cannabis, along both sides of the leaf axil, where the petioles attach to the stem. Though Guttations typically exude(in most plants) through modified leaf stomata known as hydathodes, in cannabis guttations most commonly exude at the leaf axil, or another part of the stem via a stoma
 
Top