how long can it take to flower?

ANC

Well-Known Member
I wouldn't change anything, not seeing any major calmag issues.
Calmag is used to buffer coco before use, this pushes off excess K and P.

If you don't do this, the same process is going to take place, except that K and P are going to be dumped on your plant's roots.
Calcium is important, it is used to build cell walls, and in the light and dark signaling system.
Chlorophyll is a bit like our human hemoglobin structurally. It is the plant's blood if you will. The main difference is the iron atom at the center is replaced with magnesium, so it is crucial for photosynthesis.

I'm not seeing calmag issues unless not all images loaded on my PC.

Hazes can take loooong. Have had some that ran 15 weeks and more outdoors.
My strategy for them these days is starting them late. leaving them maybe 12 weeks to finish off.
They do seem to yield to the shortening season but will hold on until the very last minute.
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
You may have flipped too early, each plant has a minimum time to reach maturity.
 

X7GrowerX7

Well-Known Member
You may have flipped too early, each plant has a minimum time to reach maturity.
I also tranplanted into a 10 gal pot then put them into flower 3 days later so maybe to roots didn't develope enough in the bigger pot
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
no, plants aren't all the same, but they all use the same mechanics. theres a hormone they produce all the time, which is destroyed by light. as the days get shorter, more of this hormone builds up and triggers flowering. as long as the plant is mature, they'll flower when they hit the tipping point. if the plant is mature and capable of flowering physically, give it less light and more darkness, and it will flower. once it starts you can bump the light back up, if i have one that doesn't want to flower, i'll drop it down to ten hours of light a day till i start to see pistils, then i'll work it back to 13/11, which is what i flower at
 
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