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cannabispatient
GOD
Registered: 05/11/16
Posts: 316
Last seen: 12 days, 13 hours
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hashplant
#826017 - 05/23/17 10:02 PM (6 years, 10 months ago) |
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what's up growery-ites,
I have ten "hashplant" seeds that I purchased one year ago from a reputable website.
I haven't sprouted any of them yet.
I live in the northeast; would it be alright to start sprouting them tomorrow if I want to grow outdoors? I realize that I should have started them one month ago but oh well. I understand that by the time I put the sprouted seedlings in soil, it will be around the first of June. Would they do just fine outdoors and finish in three to three and a half months? They'll be planted by June 1st, and I am hoping that they are done in 14 weeks, in mid September.
Thanks and have a good night
-------------------- I am Jah Jesus Christ Snoop Doggy Dogg Burning Marijuana Tree Lord Shiva King Death Row Kambodia Allah Mahavishnu Masta Killa King Wu-Tang Gautauma Buddha Om Krishna. My name is Nishith Vijay a.k.a. CannabisPatient
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Theman
Stranger
Registered: 10/06/16
Posts: 344
Last seen: 3 years, 9 months
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Prob be a bit later. But may be ok. Some people dont put outside till end of june when days get shorter but large plants. Just think veg time before ur climate is at 12 hrs of dark then add 8 9 weeks
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phychotron
Medicated
Registered: 02/17/11
Posts: 1,995
Loc: Earth (mostly)
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Re: hashplant [Re: Theman]
#826020 - 05/23/17 11:38 PM (6 years, 10 months ago) |
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I like to check the navy's daylight duration website to check. Basically when your plants will start to flower when they get around 14 hours of daylight.
-------------------- Any help given is for educational purposes only. Its your responsibility not to break any applicable laws Bamboo Bongs I make | Perfect Dry and Cure | Grapegod under LED “Human beings, vegetables, or cosmic dust, we all dance to a mysterious tune intoned in the distance by an invisible player.” ~ Albert Einstein
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Chemical Addiction
Registered: 11/20/14
Posts: 1,681
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apparently where I live we rarely get more than 14 hours of sunlight but plants don't flower until fall outside.
I think I remember reading something about the light spectrum changing over the year, more blues in the summer more reds in the winter? Edit: I meant red in summer blue in winter
-------------------- Sure. Don't expect me to compensate your wife and five retarded kids after I've drowned your exposed brain in my semen. Spider Jerusalem
Edited by Chemical Addiction (05/24/17 04:17 PM)
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phychotron
Medicated
Registered: 02/17/11
Posts: 1,995
Loc: Earth (mostly)
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14 is about where most start to show but its not set in stone. Plants in nature transition into flower with the shortening days, not just the flip of a switch.
Interesting that Arizona gets so little day light. Seattle gets 16 hours of light on the summer solstice, whereas phoenix gets 14:23. That's a considerable amount of difference.
Sativa around the equator are in 12/12 all year. Not sure how the veg/flower cycle works there exactly but I hear they grow bud year round down there.
-------------------- Any help given is for educational purposes only. Its your responsibility not to break any applicable laws Bamboo Bongs I make | Perfect Dry and Cure | Grapegod under LED “Human beings, vegetables, or cosmic dust, we all dance to a mysterious tune intoned in the distance by an invisible player.” ~ Albert Einstein
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Theman
Stranger
Registered: 10/06/16
Posts: 344
Last seen: 3 years, 9 months
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2 hour drive north here and basically only gets dusk for week or 2 around solstice but in winter dark at like 430 which sucks.
Btw in the fall is when light gets reder. Midsummer is when its bluer. Just think sunsets are red and sun gets lower, and after summer silstice sun gets lower on the horizon like a sunset . Most dont consider winter part of growing season
Near equator daylight doesnt change much so think sativas. Equitorial sativas trigger flowering easier for that reason always 14 12 hrs of daylight. And why shorter flowering sativas like durban are used for outdoor in northern climates. Couoled with airy buds that dont mold in cool moist netherlands.
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