Warpedpassage
Well-Known Member
I just took a look at this persons youtube page. Incredible stuff. Looks like he knows what hes doing.
The more i think abou it, i suppose if you took a wet, freshly harvested flower and gently squeezed it and then broke it apart you could expect that gooey result in the opening shot of the video. Assuming ofcourse you have an amazingly frosty as can be pheno. Which he clearly does.
I had been thinking it was a caterpillar from some moth, but now i think its larvae for some kind of fly. There had been pantry house moths in the home, but did not get anywhere near the tent.
Since its indoors, very clean, filtered air, small 3x3 space. My only suspect is the coco. It may have been contaminated with eggs from some sort of fly somewhere along storage and packaging of the coco. But again , i can be totally wrong. There were no other organic inputs other than kelp meal tea. So either the kelp meal or the coco.
Heres the one single fly that was found towards the end of the grow.
The more i think abou it, i suppose if you took a wet, freshly harvested flower and gently squeezed it and then broke it apart you could expect that gooey result in the opening shot of the video. Assuming ofcourse you have an amazingly frosty as can be pheno. Which he clearly does.
I had been thinking it was a caterpillar from some moth, but now i think its larvae for some kind of fly. There had been pantry house moths in the home, but did not get anywhere near the tent.
Since its indoors, very clean, filtered air, small 3x3 space. My only suspect is the coco. It may have been contaminated with eggs from some sort of fly somewhere along storage and packaging of the coco. But again , i can be totally wrong. There were no other organic inputs other than kelp meal tea. So either the kelp meal or the coco.
Heres the one single fly that was found towards the end of the grow.