DeadHeadX
Well-Known Member
This topic came up in a recent conversation with friends who also grow in these parts (New England), which have been cold and wet all summer. We all had mold issues with our outdoor grows.
At times when cutting away infected areas, I could see the spores dissipate into the air, certainly landing on the nearby, but otherwise unaffected buds. In theory, the spores must be all over in the outside world, or at least in the vicinity of the rot.
Question: any concerns with the otherwise healthy plant matter that almost certainly has spores but not actually mold growth?
Fwiw, I have dried and am currently curing and sampling some of the plant I’m referring to. Lost over 50% to rot, but the stuff that remains is quite nice. And surely loaded with inactivated spores. Thoughts or concerns?
At times when cutting away infected areas, I could see the spores dissipate into the air, certainly landing on the nearby, but otherwise unaffected buds. In theory, the spores must be all over in the outside world, or at least in the vicinity of the rot.
Question: any concerns with the otherwise healthy plant matter that almost certainly has spores but not actually mold growth?
Fwiw, I have dried and am currently curing and sampling some of the plant I’m referring to. Lost over 50% to rot, but the stuff that remains is quite nice. And surely loaded with inactivated spores. Thoughts or concerns?
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