BobCajun
Well-Known Member
Here's something I found interesting, from this article. It appears that weed can flower under surprisingly long days. The flowering phases were identical with 12/12 and the natural outdoor day lengths which varied from more than 14 to less than 12. This may explain why people have flowered with 14 hour days while using end of day far red treatments. I couldn't find any evidence that such treatments are capable of reducing the number of dark hours required for short day plants to flower, though it was useful for increasing stem length.
It's probably possible to flower with 14 hour days even without any far red treatments and the length of time to maturity may not be that much different from 12/12. Can't really tell from this table because at the end the days are less than 12 hours anyway, but I think it's possible. At least they started flowering and kept flowering at the same rate as 12 hours in the early phases, which is unexpected. Since the table shows that florets formed with 14.16 hours, they must have started being induced a week earlier with 14.4 hours. That particular strain, G5, was a high CBD strain, but it may be similar for THC ones.
It's probably possible to flower with 14 hour days even without any far red treatments and the length of time to maturity may not be that much different from 12/12. Can't really tell from this table because at the end the days are less than 12 hours anyway, but I think it's possible. At least they started flowering and kept flowering at the same rate as 12 hours in the early phases, which is unexpected. Since the table shows that florets formed with 14.16 hours, they must have started being induced a week earlier with 14.4 hours. That particular strain, G5, was a high CBD strain, but it may be similar for THC ones.