All feminized seeds? Or what?

If I had a female plant that early on in flowering developed "6 total" pollen sacks on various branches at various times in a few days span (week #2).
Possibly due to me forgeting she was asleep when I checked her early one morning after waking up earlier than usual. You know, , my routine was the cause.

So she hermie'd on me and inevitably I missed 2 sacks of pollen which I found only because of the powder left on the leaves under it. Damn! Now... I've got an entire plant bearing seeds.

Now to my question, what kind of seeds do I have. Are they hermie seeds destined to be he/she's or do I have all feminized seeds that will grow normally unless provoked with stresses similar to the mother?

Can anyone answer me that. Please... and thank you for helping
 
Is she a clone or raised from seed? I can't see a plant going hermie from one light accident, unless it's genetically programmed to hermie. Seeds from genetic hermies will tend to produce plants that hermie.

Seeds from accidents may or may not be feminized, but you might luck out, since the pollen and the flowers came from the same plant. If you're inclined to do so, let the seeds mature to the point of drying on the vine, then grow them out. It would be a great experiment.
 
It's bagseed plant I practised on to get the hang of things. So it may have more stress factors too. I grew one of the same seeds outdoor last summer female all the way through, and this one's brother got nixed at the preflower stage. So if that doesn't clear up its origins then I'm stumped too. Thanks for the input AkGram's
 
In another FAQ, the same basic question was discussed. Seeds from hermies will be feminized, being all female genes. As to whether they have a tendency to hermie later on, we have no way of predicting.
 
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