You're fine. No worries. Most hermies will push a pod out on a short stem so it can flower out to disperse the pollen and many times a cluster of more than one. The genetics of the male gene is to reach out and up to throw it's pollen into the wind and not set on the stem. What I was seeing in your pictures are mores clusters of females birthing.
I know we are playing God when we cross breed two to three strains and the landraces and linage that they were designed to be, but that makes it great when all the conditions work. Almost all hermies are going to happen outside in stress conditions. I only grow outside. I started four plants outside in mid April (why four? because state laws of five or more make it a felony). They all started slow because they received too much rain the first two weeks on the vegetative start and minimal sun. The next two weeks a freak snow storm, hail, more rain, then it cleared up. The last two weeks of the six week veg cycle was perfect. All started to flower, white hairs, all the good signs, then the weather gets hot, like upper 80's to100. That's how you stress a plant with crossed genetics. Three of my girls stayed true look great and will some be a trophy. One, it got goofy, it branched out and started a second veg stage, the smell was powerful, the white dusting of resin thick like honey or tar, then the little pods of yellow male flowers came on in ten days. She went bisexual and looks freaky. Still gonna chop and crop her because I can't leave her to play with the others, and that resin saturation, it's got to be some good smoke.