What's new
  • Happy Birthday ICMag! Been 20 years since Gypsy Nirvana created the forum! We are celebrating with a 4/20 Giveaway and by launching a new Patreon tier called "420club". You can read more here.
  • Important notice: ICMag's T.O.U. has been updated. Please review it here. For your convenience, it is also available in the main forum menu, under 'Quick Links"!

week 8 flower -- some buds shooting out new pistils, starting to look 'lumpy' .... he

antartist

Member
Two quotes that refers on reflowering. One from here and one from another site.

https://www.icmag.com/ic/showthread.php?t=33497
Flower: 65/70 days. Seventy days for maximun yield. Shortening the light period incrementally from 12 to 8 hours in the last 2 weeks is best to augment resin production and to avoid typical sativa reflowering.

and

Read a post not too long ago and the guy mentioned this, and that he sometimes reduced the lighting schedule to 13/11 around the final couple weeks or so of flowering to prevent it.

I'm currently near the end of a second grow, NL and a blueberry that's supposed to be 75/25 sativa. And I'm not at all familiar with what I'm seeing, and believe it to be "sativa reflowering".

Have several big clumps of flowers that, instead of beginning to turn colors, are sprouting new small flower clusters on top of the old flower clusters that I believed to be maturing. Something I didn't see and haven't seen while growing NL's.

As advertised, this blueberry strain flowers for 7-8 weeks. I'm currently at 7 weeks, today. This "reflowering" began a week or so ago.

I am watching the video dude and its so average...
Foxtailing is the wall.
Reflowering is the brick.
Lol!!
 

Budley Doright

Active member
Veteran
Let me try to help you out mr brick....

Your first comment has to do with sativas ....which if left flowering will start flowering again.... Sativas are not an annual..... in their native range....

The second is a guy....sort of like you who really doesnt know what he is talking about....

He says 'I believe it to be'.....
 

Budley Doright

Active member
Veteran
Cannabis is the only annual with male and female flowers on separate plants. All other dioecious (that is, gendered) plants, including its cousin, hops, are perennials. Cannabis was probably originally a short-lived perennial.
 

antartist

Member
Omg, read what u write Mr hard wall...
All cannabis strains are annual, even them which grown along the ecuador. In that case, the hours of light and genetics extend the grow cycle and not push the bud to reflower.
In our cases there is no need to talk about ecuador and the pertmanent 12/12, because the grows we talk about are done under artificial light.

As far as it concerns the way some people express our thoughts it has to do with the mentality, the quality of thinking and the lack of the ego.

I hope today you put one more brick of knowledge in you Mr wall.

Over!
 
Last edited:

Budley Doright

Active member
Veteran
Cannabis was brought into cultivation in southwestern Asia for its intoxicating properties, perhaps independently from its medical uses by the Chinese. In fact, some botanists classify the northern plants, used for fiber and oil, as C. sativa, a plant that can grow very tall, versus southern types, including C. indica, the densely branched plant about one meter tall and high resin content, or C. ruderalis, a shorter form with few or no branches. Other botanists treat this a one unstabilized species that has been under intense artificial selection for many centuries. Hemp, or marijuana, is a wind-pollinated annual or short-lived perennial with palmately compound leaves, and the height record for this plant is about 12 meters. Plants are usually dioecious, but sometimes the male plants will also bear some female flowers. Female plants are usually taller and stockier than male plants. The resin is produced around female flowers until the fruit is nearly mature.


================================


Sorry slick its just not true.....



Try searching on


cannabis short lived perennial
 

Budley Doright

Active member
Veteran
ask ed...

As the climate changed from subtropical to more temperate in the Himalayan foothills where it originated, it adapted into an annual. I suspect that in some sub-tropical and tropical areas there are still cannabis plants that live for several seasons. They flower each fall and then go into a period of slow growth. When spring arrives they start growing vegetatively again, then flower once again in the fall.


Thus the term reflowering....related to revegging.....
 

antartist

Member
Well said man.
Its a bunch of common characteristics when we talk about cannabis which sometimes are expressed in a slightly different mode and makes all that inbetween reactions.
Reveging, all kinds of reflowering and foxtailing...

I dont find the reason for arguing...
Is that enough?
 

Budley Doright

Active member
Veteran
Omg, read what u write Mr hard wall...
All cannabis strains are annual, even them which grown along the ecuador.

====================================

Whos arguing.... Im trying to educate you....

Im not really sure what an equador is.....
 
Top