Guys help

Do all strains have pistilate

  • Yes

    Votes: 2 100.0%
  • No

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    2
  • Poll closed .

Plex187

Member
I have a plant, she is about 5-6 weeks old. I have been in flowering phase for about 2 and a half weeks now. She has what it looks like female pre flower but there is no lil hairs coming out. When dose it start showing lil hairs. It is just bag seed do some strains never get the hairs?
 

Plex187

Member
I am useing like 250 watts worth of fluros mixed spectum mostly red I have 1 125 watt blue no balls lil cone shape.I don't know how to post pic from my iPod
 

DoeEyed

Well-Known Member
All the females have pistils, no matter the strain. But if she's just five weeks still, you might have to wait longer. Even if you start from day one under 12/12, a plant will not show sex, until it is sexually mature. Depending on the strain, it might not be ready yet.
 

Plex187

Member
Umm I don't think there is light leaking the plant is in cabb and the cabbinet is in the closet can light leak thru the bottom crack of the door? And my plant is not at ground level so if light dose get thru can it go up to the plant?
 

JN811

Well-Known Member
plug ur ipod in and then u should be able to open it with itunes.. either that or plug it in and go to "go advanced" then "manage attatchments" then open it directly from ur ipod or iphone or whatever.
 

JN811

Well-Known Member
i would say you need more red spectrum light to induce flowering.. It all comes down to light...
 

robert 14617

Well-Known Member
What are preflowers?


Preflowers, as opposed to full blown flowers, generally appear after the fourth week of vegetative growth from seed. Check carefully above the fourth node. Please note that preflowers are very small and and almost impossible to differentiate without magnification. A photographer's 10x loupe is handy indeed when examining preflowers.

As the images below demonstrate, the female preflower is pear shaped and produces a pair of pistils. Frequently, the female preflowers do not show pistils until well after the preflowers have emerged. Thus, don't yank a plant because it has no pistils. Pistillate preflowers are located at the node between the stipule and emerging branch.

Also, some female preflowers never produce pistils. A female preflower without pistils is difficult to distinguish from a male preflower. Thus, hermaphodite issues should not be resolved by the appearance of preflowers, without pistils, on a plant otherwise believed to be a female.

Female (pistillate)



Image courtesy of MrIto

Female (pistillate)


Image courtesy of Uncle Ben

The male preflower may be described as a "ball on a stick." However, its most recognizable feature is its absence of pistils. Sometimes, a male plant will develop mature staminate flowers after prolonged periods of vegetative growth. These appear in clusters around the nodes.

The following image shows a male plant in early flowering. Staminate flowers are located at the node between the stipule and emerging branch.

Male (staminate)

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Image courtesy of PLAYn


Image courtesy of PsycoXul
 
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