Kinch
Well-Known Member
Hello all. Long time reader first time poster. I am a newbie (outdoor) grower with one success season. I have a question about sexing and maturation.
I have four in the ground grown from random seeds I collected (sloppy and noncommittal, I know). Three of the four are almost six feet tall. One is at three feet, stunted due to drought, but she is flowering. The problem: two are not showing the same rate of maturation. I am concerned that these two plants that (very?) late to show sex are male or hermaphroditic. I take a magnified look at the branch-stem joint of these mystery plants. When I do, I see what might be the darkening hairs of beginning female pistils, but the lateness of the development concerns me.
My questions:
Could males take this long to show pollen sacks?
Could I be missing sure signs of male plants?
Would hermaphrodites appear sex neutral and then secretly throw pollen in the air when I skip a weekly visit?
Is mid-August in the midwest too early to be expecting fuller maturity?
The main question:
Should I yank these two late bloomers out of caution or keep playing wait and see?
Two notes on the seeds:
1. I had expected half the crop to be males (2 of 4) by the law of statistical average. I have found no males (0 of 4). I fear I am not seeing the male pollen sacks during inspection. I can only visit the site once a week at most, so I cannot monitor as much as I would like. Could the seeds be second generation genetically feminized . . . to explain the all female crop?
2. Is it possible that the different mix of plant strands is causing the frustrating staggering of showing sex?
Apologies for being a sloppy grower,
Kinch
I have four in the ground grown from random seeds I collected (sloppy and noncommittal, I know). Three of the four are almost six feet tall. One is at three feet, stunted due to drought, but she is flowering. The problem: two are not showing the same rate of maturation. I am concerned that these two plants that (very?) late to show sex are male or hermaphroditic. I take a magnified look at the branch-stem joint of these mystery plants. When I do, I see what might be the darkening hairs of beginning female pistils, but the lateness of the development concerns me.
My questions:
Could males take this long to show pollen sacks?
Could I be missing sure signs of male plants?
Would hermaphrodites appear sex neutral and then secretly throw pollen in the air when I skip a weekly visit?
Is mid-August in the midwest too early to be expecting fuller maturity?
The main question:
Should I yank these two late bloomers out of caution or keep playing wait and see?
Two notes on the seeds:
1. I had expected half the crop to be males (2 of 4) by the law of statistical average. I have found no males (0 of 4). I fear I am not seeing the male pollen sacks during inspection. I can only visit the site once a week at most, so I cannot monitor as much as I would like. Could the seeds be second generation genetically feminized . . . to explain the all female crop?
2. Is it possible that the different mix of plant strands is causing the frustrating staggering of showing sex?
Apologies for being a sloppy grower,
Kinch