Will seeds from my femminized plants be female?

HomeGrownHairy

Well-Known Member
Help please. I discovered 3 seeds so far, from my last indoor grow using femminized White Widow seeds. The grow went a little long and I had one small branch that produced a few seeds. I am thrilled to get them. Not sure of they will grow up to be males or females. I'm thinking female. Anybody know for sure.
 

brimon

Member
i heard that is how fem seeds are made, a female is forced to produce male parts then pollinates itself. a hermie pollinating itself. Then again im no expert.
 

HomeGrownHairy

Well-Known Member
hermi pollinating another female plant not selfing
Let me clear this up. Out of 5 feminized plants, I had 1 feminized White Widow that developed 3 seeds on the tip of 1 stem. I am thinking they should be female, but that's what I want to know for sure and why I started the thread.
 
if the fem plant hermied and pollenated ANOTHER PLANT then the other plants seeds will most likely be Female.. However,if the fem plant hermied and pollenated itself then its seeds will most likely be Female also; ERRR..IF you consider this female..









HAHAH.. In other words, those seeds from the hermie plant itself will more than likely be a hermie.. Just like Lady Gaga lol.. It will look sexy as hell, but it will have a lil "nanner".
 

xxplosive42o

Active Member
A plant doesnt turn hermi because it took longer. SORRY

You never want a hermi because that means YOU made mistakes, not the plant.
 

Haddaway

Well-Known Member
female plants will produce male flowers late in bloom, its a survival technique
Yep, why does everyone who obviously know nothing respond to this thread? If you actually know what you're talking about and have real experience about the topic you should reply to a thread, but it seems almost everyone that has responded to this thread had no idea what they're talking about.

But to the person who started this thread, you are very lucky. They will most likely be female, as that is what feminized seeds are, a strain so conditioned with so many generations of just female offspring that it almost exclusively produces feminized seeds (much much higher chance it will be female, but still a very very small chance it could be male) So yes utilize your seeds :)
 

Mr.Therapy Man

Well-Known Member
If its a nanner its fine,If it has balls its a hermie.These seeds are made with sts so theres no hermorphedite in the gene pool.They are stressed.All these people talk about are hermie seeds Ive pollinated fem seeds just experimenting and almost all the second cross is female and no hermies.Ive only did this with Opium which is stable as hell
 

HomeGrownHairy

Well-Known Member
A plant doesnt turn hermi because it took longer. SORRY

You never want a hermi because that means YOU made mistakes, not the plant.
Kinda... I kept it in flower longer than I should have with my Fox Farm flowering nutes. That being said, it's pretty common in long flowering plants that go unpolinated to get some seeds...read up b4 you post stuff you dont know about.
 

HomeGrownHairy

Well-Known Member
Yep, why does everyone who obviously know nothing respond to this thread? If you actually know what you're talking about and have real experience about the topic you should reply to a thread, but it seems almost everyone that has responded to this thread had no idea what they're talking about.

But to the person who started this thread, you are very lucky. They will most likely be female, as that is what feminized seeds are, a strain so conditioned with so many generations of just female offspring that it almost exclusively produces feminized seeds (much much higher chance it will be female, but still a very very small chance it could be male) So yes utilize your seeds :)
Ya know, that's what I thought I'd read. That's why I was thrilled to get a few seeds, just 3 so far. This site is really good for folks posting what they know, and folks posting what they think they know.
 

robert 14617

Well-Known Member
self pollinating is one female producing pollen that makes seeds by itself,these seeds are more than likely to repeat this process
 
Top