Is it possible?

James Tucker

Active Member
Hey everyone, I've got a question. It started snowing here the other day and its very rare for It to do so in October. Temps are in the 30's days and even lower at night. My plants were in flower but hadn't quite finished yet, so I brought them inside and put them under a light with timer. My question is is it possible for me to get them to finish and if so what should the light schedule be? They seem to be doing fine and heallthy. Thanks
 
This is 3 days after they were brought inside due to freezing temps outside. Not sure what the darker growth is in the center of the flowers. Is it normal or?
 

Attachments

  • 20201027_162218.jpg
    20201027_162218.jpg
    1.1 MB · Views: 54
  • 20201027_162121.jpg
    20201027_162121.jpg
    1.1 MB · Views: 51
  • 20201027_162052.jpg
    20201027_162052.jpg
    904.4 KB · Views: 63
  • 20201027_162025.jpg
    20201027_162025.jpg
    1.2 MB · Views: 55
  • 20201027_161901.jpg
    20201027_161901.jpg
    848.4 KB · Views: 62
  • 20201027_161839.jpg
    20201027_161839.jpg
    880.6 KB · Views: 50
This is 3 days after they were brought inside due to freezing temps outside. Not sure what the darker growth is in the center of the flowers. Is it normal or?
Doesn’t look like bud rot to me so it’s probably just the plant reacting to the low temperatures, albeit in sort of an unusual way.
 
Low temps can bring out purples, also I think a K deficiency. Theres some dispensaries/growers that do this on purpose to charge more for weed or make it look "better"...or rather like the purps strain.

Keep your light schedule at what it is outside since they were outside. Looks likes a few more weeks at least.
 
Low temps can bring out purples, also I think a K deficiency. Theres some dispensaries/growers that do this on purpose to charge more for weed or make it look "better"...or rather like the purps strain.

Keep your light schedule at what it is outside since they were outside. Looks likes a few more weeks at least.
Thank you!
 
On the bright side, everything looks close enough that light intensity won't matter as much. They should finish fine even if the light you have isn't great. Most of the work has already been done. I would just match up the hours of light to at or below what they were getting outdoors. That will keep them flowering. !2 hours is the basic flower time. You can drop it back to 10 or 11 hours if you want to give them a little push to the end.
 
Back
Top Bottom