Those are some nice nugs. Dense and heavy. Congrats on the pull. How many times can you flower outdoor in a year? Tempting to try outdoor but will be somewhere remote, that would be fun.
Hey Twelve!
Thanks!
I too am definitely impressed with the yields I have been getting by using this indoor/outdoor flowering technique I kind of stumbled upon by accident.
To answer your question... Although I haven't actually tried this deliberately yet, I would say TWO times. If you used your indoor rig to trigger the cycle both times on each end of the growing season and finished outdoors both times while the natural light cycle was conducive to flowering.
You could start a batch under 12/12 indoors in say Mid March, then bring them outside to finish in late April when the daylight hours are still short enough to keep the plant in flower mode outside. After harvesting the first crop, you could then reveg outside naturally through mid July and then re-flower the same plant again indoors and let it finish outdoors again later in season.
I got the digital microscope the other day, loving it! The quality is not as good as yours, a bit grainy, it's better than the lope for sure that thing hurts my eye. Thanks again for the inspiration.
Very cool! It was my pleasure my friend!
Every serious grower should have a good scope at his or her disposal!
I wasn't expecting that the scope you bought would rival my Celestron, but now you can see the benefits of having that higher resolution and if you really get into using a microscope for trichome checking, then perhaps you can eventually pick up the same rig I have and feel fully justified in spending that extra cash?
Speaking of using the same gear...
You mentioned being unhappy with your loupe? Perhaps you just haven't found the right one yet?
I'm always recommending the BeLOMO Triplet 10x Loupe that I use for spot checking out in the garden!
It has just the right amount of magnification to see the different stages of trichome degradation, but a wide enough field of view to cover a large swath of the bud at once, so you can easily "scan" an entire plant in less than a minute with the proper lighting. Outdoors it is a piece of cake!