My Female Bagseed, 10 Days into flowering!

DB&ST

Well-Known Member
The only surviver from the 4-5 plants i started with.
Some died (poisoned by my gf dad, long story..), the others turned male.
Started in a CFL box, and moved to the porch after 3-4 weeks.
Growing in a 6.5L pot, local soil (from a hydroshop) using BioGrow and BioBloom.

It's been 10 days since i identified she was a chick (saw a little hair).
How is she looking?

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DB&ST

Well-Known Member
Thanks! if everything goes smooth in 2 months i will be blazing from my own stuff!
a dream come true! (:
 

klmmicro

Well-Known Member
Great job! The funnest part is yet to come. Looks like a hybrid with about equal parts sativa and indica. You have plenty time to get a 30x loupe for checking the trichs once it starts to frost.
 

DB&ST

Well-Known Member
very nice..
Thanks!

Yeah looks good. How long did you veg it for, are you flowering outside?
Veg for 3 and half weeks approximately, and then moved them outside due to some problems with the inside grow, and it's winter so they started flowering not long ago.
Looks really nice.
Thanks!
Great job! The funnest part is yet to come. Looks like a hybrid with about equal parts sativa and indica. You have plenty time to get a 30x loupe for checking the trichs once it starts to frost.
Thanks mate! im thinking on getting a 100x because i can get one for free.. hope i won't see trichs growing on the trichs (:
 

DB&ST

Well-Known Member
Ok, so any guess how much will she yield?
I really have no idea, don't even know how much to guess.
 

klmmicro

Well-Known Member
There is no way for anyone to guess accurately. What are the actual genetics? This is the biggest factor that are a complete mystery to even you, the grower. This is why bagseed grows are not taken too seriously. They are great for experience, but you know nothing of what to expect, so you cannot produce the best environment for max yield.

Keep doing what you are doing. You still have between 45 and 60 days before you will start seeing anything mature. Watch the plant for stresses, like heat or nute deficiencies. Without knowing what you have, you will need to be especially keen to the plants language.
 

DB&ST

Well-Known Member
There is no way for anyone to guess accurately. What are the actual genetics? This is the biggest factor that are a complete mystery to even you, the grower. This is why bagseed grows are not taken too seriously. They are great for experience, but you know nothing of what to expect, so you cannot produce the best environment for max yield.

Keep doing what you are doing. You still have between 45 and 60 days before you will start seeing anything mature. Watch the plant for stresses, like heat or nute deficiencies. Without knowing what you have, you will need to be especially keen to the plants language.
Thanks for tips!
Right now im giving her half strength BioGrow and BioBloom, not seeing any signs of stress from nutes or heat.
She doesn't spend all the day in the sun, half of the day she's in the shade, and when it's rainy she's under a roof.
 

klmmicro

Well-Known Member
So entirely outdoor light? That puts even more into the variables. If your location is accurate, then you have about the same seasons as we do. The days will be getting longer as we come into spring, so you might want to consider how to keep the plant in total darkness for 12 hours. If the plant detects that it will be coming into longer days, it could begin reverting back to a veg state...in essence, it would stop flowering and start growing for the heavens again.

Stick with the nutrients that are working now. It is better to "under-nute" than over saturate the soil. Less chance of lockout and most nutrients are "hot" anyway.
 

DB&ST

Well-Known Member
So entirely outdoor light? That puts even more into the variables. If your location is accurate, then you have about the same seasons as we do. The days will be getting longer as we come into spring, so you might want to consider how to keep the plant in total darkness for 12 hours. If the plant detects that it will be coming into longer days, it could begin reverting back to a veg state...in essence, it would stop flowering and start growing for the heavens again.

Stick with the nutrients that are working now. It is better to "under-nute" than over saturate the soil. Less chance of lockout and most nutrients are "hot" anyway.
I know that in March it will be 12/12. until then the days are shorter.
And i expect it to finish by mid March, just when the days revert to longer days.
 

klmmicro

Well-Known Member
I know that in March it will be 12/12. until then the days are shorter.
And i expect it to finish by mid March, just when the days revert to longer days.
Cool beans! That will be plenty of flowering time. You might even harvest before then. No real way to know yet, but it is possible.
 

DB&ST

Well-Known Member
Yup, i figured that even if it will take longer it still going to be done until late March.
 
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