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Frisian Dew in the Big Greenhouse

THC123

Active member
Veteran
Looks fanatastic bro

But, normally the Frisians will finish before it is Mildew season here.

No they wont mildew season here has already started and september-octobre-nov it is even worse

PM thrives in hot conditions! I already had an outbreak 1 month ago but now it is gone after treatment. Now becasue it is a bit drier it is not such a problem but a few days of rain combined with hotter temps are ideal for PM

Prevention, prevention , prevention

And if you dont wanna use bayfidan now there is always greencure(which i have at home), which is organic but that does not have a long term effect so it will keep coming back

I treat them twice with bayfidan and never have mildew

If you wont , expect the mildew the start in the first 1-3 weeks of flowering and to get out of control by week 5-6, and with such trees you can forget about manually treating them.

Like they say, ""een gewaarschuwd man is er twee waard!!!!"" or in English, better safe then sorry.....because you will be sorry if it gets out of control later on bro........and the spores are already there
 
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dread

Active member
Veteran
Looks fanatastic bro



No they wont mildew season here has already started and september-octobre-nov it is even worse

PM thrives in hot conditions! I already had an outbreak 1 month ago but now it is gone after treatment. Now becasue it is a bit drier it is not such a problem but a few days of rain combined with hotter temps are ideal for PM

Prevention, prevention , prevention

And if you dont wanna use bayfidan now there is always greencure(which i have at home), which is organic but that does not have a long term effect so it will keep coming back

I treat them twice with bayfidan and never have mildew

If you wont , expect the mildew the start in the first 1-3 weeks of flowering and to get out of control by week 5-6, and with such trees you can forget about manually treating them.

Like they say, ""een gewaarschuwd man is er twee waard!!!!"" or in English, better safe then sorry.....because you will be sorry if it gets out of control later on bro........and the spores are already there

he's right about that
i already removed some other garden plants with pm this season,& it keeps coming....
 

HellaFella420

Active member
Veteran
WoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoahWoah, wait a second...

How many M^3 you have under glass over there friend?


Dunno why spinosid wouldn't be organic, its just a substance that is isolated from a bacteria from an abandoned sugar cane mill in puerto rico or somthing... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinosad

<--- Willing to relocate to Europe of you realize you need some large scale management expertise!
 

chak-ra

Well-known member
Veteran
Overview of the Frisians


The first shot was taken at exactly the same position as the first pictures of the overview at the beginning of the thread, post #2


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chak-ra

Well-known member
Veteran
Frisian #3, my personal favorite. Reacts best to the soil, has almost no bugs and has the nicest make-up and internode distance. Hope she turns purple !

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Sativa dominant leaves, but indica/hybrid-like internode distance and height. Bushier, but in a nice way, with elongated sativa leaves. She likes my soil, that's for sure!
 

chak-ra

Well-known member
Veteran
But you've updated in the wrong topic XD jeeeebus what you smoking? White Jones again?

Anyway !

A visitor. Good thing those plants do not harm the bees
Nature's looking for a way to get high. Not yet, little one!

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NEWSFLASH: SOON IN THE GREENHOUSE STARTING: CBD-CRITIAL MASS + CBD-NORDLE by CBDCrew. :woohoo:
 

chak-ra

Well-known member
Veteran
Speaking bout automazar... might roll one with it now ^^


@ Gaius: yes, we are in the process of tying them down. We've installed netting to direct the branches. Also the biggest cola's will be tied to the poles of the greenhouse. Would be cool to have at least one main cola shoot out through the roof. Not very useful (most probably very bad!!) , but nevertheless, would be cool to see a greenhouse this big and plants that cannot be tamed. ... I'm stil in doubt. I just want to have maybe one picture of one cola actually going through, but the rest we'll tie down as much as we can... lots of work that is :)

Cheers!
 

soil margin

Active member
Veteran
Frisian #3, my personal favorite. Reacts best to the soil, has almost no bugs and has the nicest make-up and internode distance. Hope she turns purple !


Sativa dominant leaves, but indica/hybrid-like internode distance and height. Bushier, but in a nice way, with elongated sativa leaves. She likes my soil, that's for sure!

Def, I would love to have those genetics. Make some seeds and I'l buy them from you. :thank you:
 

Femora

Member
Really nice show you got going here! I like what I see! :D


About the Automazar... I have one going on and im utterly curious how you you'd describe the buzz.

So long!
Fem~
 

comustal

Member
"Soon in the greenhouse, cbd critical mass and cbd nordle from the cbd crew" whooop whpopppp lai di da dam dam :))))) ;)
 

THC123

Active member
Veteran
NICE MAN ==--- reply to THC's mistakes , Ignore post ---==

You MF dont go around telling people to ignore me or ill drive by that greenhouse of yours with a few bricks :deadhorse :blowbubbles: :bump:
 

chak-ra

Well-known member
Veteran
Allrighty then. Bring it on THC! Better throw one of your brick-like buds through my windows! hehe

Now, less pleasant news. One of our Frisians is sick!
One of the bigger plants, so that is very very sad...

I pruned them all good couple of days ago. With the particular Frisian, I cut off a lot of her underside (yes yes, I like them stems nekkid!)

Suddenly I saw some of the apical buds (flower sites) that were wilting.
I found a connection between the extensive pruning and the wounds the plant has to fix. So she needs moisture (internal saps) to fix the wounds I made. So the logical thing would be to draw moisture from within the plant, thuss causing wilting symptoms.

But, I returned today, only to find the wilting slowly, but surely progressing.
I carefully inspected the tops for any kind of disease or fungus or pest, virus whatever you can see with the naked eye.

The following updates will concern this problem, as I have yet to find an answer to this problem and how to stop it, or if necessary to cut her down.
She is the only plant showing symptoms.


So, IF you guys could help me out, it would be greatly appreciated!


SYMPTOMS:

- Wilting of upper and newly formed leaves
- Turning and curling of the infectef leaf
- Pink/red-brownisch coloration on the underside of the leaf or stem of the leaf
- Brown spot on newly formed petioles


I already looked at (and ruled out) the following:

Fusarium oxysporum
Fusarium Wilt
charcoal rot
Root rot
Stem rot
Pink rot
Stem Canker
Southern Blight

The remaining fungal diseases I'm stuck with are:

Twig Blight
Phomopsis stem canker
brown stem canker
Verticillium wilt - mimics fusarium wilt but xylem coloration is different
red boot - but no wilting, red coloration needed
Texas root rot - evironnemental conditions (rare) - resembles fusarium, verticillium wilt, brown stem cancker



First update, these 5 pictures are of the first glance. You immediately notice something's not right.

Second update: closer look at the coloration/problems at the stems

Third: the brown spots occuring at a lot of new bud sites.


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