First Harvest (Blue Frost, Gorilla Glue, Blue Dream)

Discussion in 'Growing Marijuana Outdoors' started by calmglass23, Sep 12, 2015.

  1. Are they ready to harvest? Triachomes look cloudy and amber in places to me... red hairs curling... that's what I thought I read...

    Also do they look healthy, no bud rot or mold, etc?
     

    Attached Files:

  2. Yea.. I've been flushing the last 3 days... I'm wondering if I should harvest this week or next or what... I'm thinking flush for next week or so...
     
  3. Then I read this...

    Pre-harvest flushing is a myth. I don't want to repeat myself so if you want all the sources and facts you can search the forum or my nick and look through my posts.

    But just to bring it to rest; nutrients are not stored in the calyxes. There literally is nothing to 'flush out'.
     
  4. Pimp T, on 12 May 2015 - 8:13 PM, said:
    hey coot how does the whole "flushing" soil thing apply to the Clackamas coot mix? What are your thoughts on flushing LOS? Should aloe silica coconut water ful power and SST watering stop 2 weeks prior to harvest?
    Here's the most recent answer that I gave to this question a couple of weeks ago....
    Chlorophyll b is the 'type' found in plants as we're defining it. Other structures are found in algae, cyanobacteria, et al.
    Here is the molecular formula - C55H70O6N4Mg so we're looking at 55 Carbon ions, 70 Hydrogen ions, 6 Oxygen ions, 4 Nitrogen ions and 1 Magnesium ion. All 6 forms of chlorophyll have one consistent dynamic, i.e. a single Magnesium ion. Not two, not three - one. So much for the mythology about magnesium-hungry plants or worse in the wacky weed world where specific 'strains' can be magnesium-hungry. Looking at just chlorophyll b a better myth would be carbon-hungry or hydrogen-hungry and maybe even oxygen-hungry and nothing to do with magnesium.
    My understanding of this worst example of stoner science is that by dumping copious amounts of water somehow water with it's simple H2O formula is able to reach up from the root zone then into a plant's vascular system and deconstruct a fairly complex molecule - that must be some really unique water indeed!
    In a dynamic called translocation plants can and do move materials from leaves to other tissues - that is established botany. Plants produce carbohydrates (sugars) in the leaves by photosynthesis but non-photysynthetic parts of the plant also require carbohydrates and other organic and nonorganic materials. It's for this reason that nutrients are translocated from sources (regions of excess carbohydrates, primarily matures leaves) to what are called sinks.
    ?Some important sinks are roots, flowers, fruits, stems and developing leaves. Leaves are particularly interesting in the translocation process because they are sinks when they are young and become sources later when they are about half-grown.
    Carbohydrates are simply Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen molecules, i.e. simple sugars.
    So let's say for sake of silliness that flushing can trigger translocation which must be a real threat for rice plants, where are the chlorophyll molecules going? They can't be destroyed because they're elements which cannot be destroyed or changed unless of course we're talking about cannabis which has special properties that negate almost every law of botany, biology, chemistry, physics imaginable.
    My simple question is this: once this special water deconstructs the chlorophyll compound where do the ions go? Into thin air? That would be difficult since Magnesium is a metallic element but again we have to suspend even common sense to shore-up the flushing argument so who knows? Perhaps a special air canopy is created from flushing which can move magnesium around at will.
    Even if water could deconstruct and force translocation of elements doesn't that defeat the purpose in the first place which is claimed that flushing will remove the nasties causing us to not have dank! If the mature leaves are the repository the why would you want to move these ions to the buds which you plan on consuming?
    It's difficult to write this stuff without falling out of my chair with laughter. The argument fails on every level - even common sense.
    Fire away! I'm wearing stainless-steel Fruit of the Loom briefs - I can take it!
    CC
    ===============================================
    Posted by one of the smarter people on the city... BNW
     
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  5. Without physically checking trichomes the only advice I would give any grower is patients. Dobt fish em love then and check them they will tell you when they are ready
     

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