super sticky and aromatic, dried a little and it packs a punch - 4 tokes and i wish i had stopped at 3. probably have a hundred or more buds like these, i trimmed one to make it more visible. all the different strains have so much variety in flower colors i just dont know what to look for - this is pineapple punch, sown March 26, all organic outdoor grow.
so do i wait a little longer? its potent as hell as it is. if i need to wait, exactly which "hairs" do want to watch to change color? this strain was stated as 80-90 max temp, but i have TLC'd them with shade cloth and drip irrigation through 2 months of mid to upper 90's/100deg even for a few days ("feels like" for humans was 110+) with excessive humidity. a heat wave thinned them out about 2 mos ago - - one plant barely recovered and is skimpy, the other is very open and thin inside but nice full crown of buds on the outside, i probably have 150+ flowers like these. on a 5'x5' plant. since i have successfully staved off mold and fungus and insects to this point i dont want anything to happen at the last minute!
btw - i found that big okra plants provide great cover - and have the added benefit of acting as a great host/decoy plant for grasshoppers. they stay on those big broad leaves and dont mess with the cannibis!
so do i wait a little longer? its potent as hell as it is. if i need to wait, exactly which "hairs" do want to watch to change color? this strain was stated as 80-90 max temp, but i have TLC'd them with shade cloth and drip irrigation through 2 months of mid to upper 90's/100deg even for a few days ("feels like" for humans was 110+) with excessive humidity. a heat wave thinned them out about 2 mos ago - - one plant barely recovered and is skimpy, the other is very open and thin inside but nice full crown of buds on the outside, i probably have 150+ flowers like these. on a 5'x5' plant. since i have successfully staved off mold and fungus and insects to this point i dont want anything to happen at the last minute!
btw - i found that big okra plants provide great cover - and have the added benefit of acting as a great host/decoy plant for grasshoppers. they stay on those big broad leaves and dont mess with the cannibis!
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