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Posts archive for: July, 2009
  • Germinate Cannabis Seeds

    Basically, you’ll need two saucers or plates and some moist tissue.

    - Line the bottom of the first plate with a few layers of wet tissue and drain any excess water from the plate.
    - Next, place your cannabis seeds on top of the tissue, allowing each seed as much space as possible.
    - Place another few layers of moist tissue on top of the cannabis seeds, again allowing excess water to drain off.
    - Lastly, cover everything with the second plate, upside down, to form a ‘clam-shell’ shape – this will create the dark, moist environment necessary for germination.
    - Place the plates somewhere warm (21ºC) and away from direct light.

    Your seeds are now on their way to germination.

    - Check your seeds every day to ensure that the tissue does not dry out. Spray the tissues with water if necessary.
    - Within a few days you should see the first seeds open and a root emerge. It is uncommon, but some seeds may take up to 10 days or even two weeks to open.
    - When the first few millimeters of root have emerged from an open seed, you should then CAREFULLY (preferably with tweezers) transfer it to a small container of growing medium (soil or rockwool). Make a hole 2-3mm (max 5mm) deep in the medium, place your seed, root first, into the hole and cover over.
    - Your seedling should emerge from the medium within 1 to 3 days.

    What are the best conditions for seedlings?

    Cannabis seedlings will benefit from a bright (though not, initially, under lamps or in direct sunlight), warm (21ºC) and humid environment. A propagator is the easiest way to achieve these conditions. A propagator may be bought or built. It is, basically, a box with a transparent top which allows light in but stops humidity escaping. The simplest form of propagator would be a waterproof box with clear plastic sheeting over the top. The advantage of shop-bought propagators is that they often have built-in heating and/or vents in the cover to allow humidity regulation. They also usually allow more light to reach the seedlings.

    Place your propagator next to a window to give the seedlings light, but avoid direct sunlight for the first couple of weeks.

    When can seedlings be put under lights / in the sun?

    When cannabis seedlings have grown their second or third set of serrated leaves (not counting the round cotyledons that initially emerge from the seed) they are usually hardy enough to flourish in direct sunlight or beneath a grow-lamp (preferably metal halide or fluorescent tubes). Always keep your grow-lights at least 50cm from your seedlings.

     

    When can I tell whether they are male or female?

    Cannabis seeds will only show its sex once flowering has begun. Cannabis begins to flower when it receives 12 hours of light and 12 hours of uninterrupted darkness in each 24-hour cycle. Once this light cycle (or photoperiod) is initiated, the first flowers should be visible within 2 weeks.

    Inside, it is the decision of the grower when to alter the photoperiod and induce flowering. This is achieved by simply adjusting the timers on your lights.

    Outside, the grower must wait until the natural daylight hours have decreased to 12 per day. Exactly when this occurs will, of course, vary depending on your locality. In Northern Europe it happens around mid-to-late July.

    It is possible to induce flowering outside by allowing your plants 12 hours of daylight each day, then covering them or taking them inside. This must, however, be done every day without fail.

  • Cannabis plants are either male or female

    Cannabis plants are either male or female. The male plants produce pollen which pollinates the flowers of the female plant, which once pollinated, produce seeds. If the female cannabis plant is not pollinated (if there are no male plants nearby producing pollen), the flower/buds continue to develop and produce THC. Female cannabis plants which are not pollinated are referred to as sensemilla (without seeds).

    Usually 40-50% of the plants are male.

    A female cannabis plant can either generate a large seedless bud, a large bud with a few seeds, or a large cannabis bud that is almost totally seeds. The first case is achieved by removing all the male plants before any of their flowers open. The second case occurs when a few male cannabis flowers have opened but you remove them before any more open. The third case occurs when you miss-time the flowering of the male. This can be devastating if you have big female cannabis plants because you could loose 90% of the smokable herb to seed production.

    The spotting of cannabis males is one of the most difficult of things to explain to a person that`s never grown since it really takes careful attention to how the tops of male plants look at this stage of development. Even experienced growers will be unsure at times and will have to wait till the next visit to be sure. When a male enters the stage of cannabis flower development, the tips of the branches where a bud would develop will start to grow what looks like a little bud (little balls) but it will have no white hairs coming out of it. Cannabis females will have no balls and will have small white hairs.

    Cannabis males are often, but not always, tall with stout stems, sporadic branching, and few leaves. Males are usually harvested except those used for breeding, after their sex has been determined, but before the pollen is shed. When harvesting, especially if close to females, cut the plant off at the base, taking care to shake the male as little as possible. This helps prevent any accidental pollination by an unnoticed, open male flower

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