I love how clean your setup looks! Killing it bro!Still Waiting on the Ambering of the Trichomes.
We'll see how they look in a few more weeks.
Till then, RAINY & CLOUDY days lay ahead. View attachment 183481 The Same Girl from the Video 4 weeks later.
ThanksI love how clean your setup looks! Killing it bro!
They were the works from a breeding project from a friend of mine that started his research around 1969 when he returned home from Vietnam. He no longer grew after 1991 due to unlawful reasons and has since long past. I was told by him that another fellow Service member who was CIA had brought beans back from Afghanistan and that he had beans from Thai sticks he had sent home from his tours.What strains you got going there in that amazing outdoor setup ?
I'm in the NE also, and agree with you about the weather ! We harvested a tad early just to avoid more rain and budrot.
I wonder if Todd from AG would be able to make an educated/accurate guess of the strains if he were physically in your garden to experience your plants ? But he's probably in Calif.Todd from AG seed and I were recently talking, And he gave me a contact for a Lab in MASS that can research the lineage from just a stem sample.
The cost is somewhere around $300 to test.
He is in Cali, and I've already had thoughts about an invite.I wonder if Todd from AG would be able to make an educated/accurate guess of the strains if he were physically in your garden to experience your plants ? But he's probably in Calif.
I approach Botrytis with a H2o2 Spray / Mist to dampen the infected area, then carefully spread the flower and continue spraying to keep any spores from dusting anything else around.I deal with this every year on at least a few plants. The humidity being at 90% percent without a breeze at night seems to trigger this a lot more than rain does; I've had a Sativa dominant strain in a greenhouse that didn't get rained on, and lost more of that plant than I did the ones out in the rain with WAY bigger buds. I normally chop that stuff off and toss it, and then check inside the bud. You have to open up a few sections of it to make sure the stem itself isn't white, and if it's not, you can juts chop off the affected area, and toss that, and the rest should be good still.
It took me a while to figure that out, but, once I realized that the stem having white on it meant it did indeed spread, I knew I could essentially toss an entire top over that, VS trying to dig through it looking for spots without any rot.