I speak on behalf of your chickens.
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It might just be me? I don't see any pictures other than in part 1.I don't know how this looks to other people, but to me I feel pretty confident on my calls.
No, you were right. I couldn't fit all the pics in one post, so I did multiple post quickly and then added the pictures to avoid other posts occurring between. I wrote that I was doing that in the first post, but having now completed them I have deleted that notice. Cheers!It might just be me? I don't see any pictures other than in part 1.
Edit - they are there now.
It's fascinating. It's going to be interesting to see if you are correct.Update part 5 of 5 - Conclusions
I don't know how this looks to other people, but to me I feel pretty confident on my calls. It looks like I have 3 males and 3 females. I wasn't able to do anything with them today as it has been raining, but I'll soon get rid of the males to free up some working space for me, and some expansion space for the females.
Comparing the photo sets of the strain pairs
On the above critique it looks like I have 1 male and 1 female for each strain pair. I think if 2 plants of the same strain pair are of opposite genders, if the 2 photo sets appear different, then I think that further supports the conclusion that each strain pair has one of each gender.
For those folks who grow regular seeds, I hope this may be of some use. For me, in a year's time I probably will have forgotten a lot of this detail so I'll be returning to these posts over my following grows to compare and reference.
All of this is my subjective 2 cents
I cannot guarantee my conclusions, only time can. But the above content, details the reasons that I have used to guide my conclusions. I profess no expertise at this, merely that I have grown regular seeds for a few years and I have observed differences in appearance between male and female gender structures, and also, I have grown them out to where their gender structures are fully revealed and confirmed, as either showing pollen balls or pistils. So, for this grow I feel I have seen enough now to identify the males and remove them.
Thanks to those of you who dropped in, I hope you and your gardens are doing great, all the very best and keep well.
Thanks Carmen, I am just being practical. I wish I had plenty of 'safe space' to grow loads of plants and play around with different strains etc, but the reality I've got limited growing space and 6 plants is too many for my balcony. If my predictions don't pan out, then I will take the results on board for next time. You have a good one!It's fascinating. It's going to be interesting to see if you are correct.
I hope not too soon. This year I thought I had identified gender on strains that pre-flower quite late (gender was not certain for Purple Haze x Malawi until third week of September). Nonetheless, relying on my "gender identification skills", I removed all "males" and ... oops, was left with only one plant of that strain. That one looked female, but turned out to be male. Here's the photo taken August 15 that fooled me (even other growers commented it looked female, but note the two goggles at the bottom of the photo):Update part 5 of 5 - Conclusions
... I'll soon get rid of the males
I think that further supports the conclusion that each strain pair has one of each gender.
For those folks who grow regular seeds, I hope this may be of some use. For me, in a year's time I probably will have forgotten a lot of this detail so I'll be returning to these posts over my following grows to compare and reference.
Thanks Emeraldo! I really wanted to make an in depth reference for future regular seed determination. I am pleased I managed to show a range of different closeup appearances within a single plant. To me, it shows that we really need to check multiple nodes to be sure. Of course complete confidence only comes with either pistils or pollen balls. I have previously looked back on my past gender structure closeups (of which there is only 1 or 2) but they are a help when looking at undetermined new plants. But because of the number of pics I took, I feel now in this one post, that there are lot of good reasonably clear pics to compare and reference against future grows.THANKS Stunger! Very methodical and box-ticking. Of course there's no guarantee, but it seems you really know your stuff. (I say "seems" to give us/you a little "plausible deniability"). It will be very interesting to visit this post again in a month or so when things start to become clearer.
It looks like a double post of the same pic.Relying on my "gender identification skills" I removed all "males" and ... oops, was left with only one plant of that strain, a male. Here's the photos taken August 15 that fooled me (even other growers commented it looked female, but note the two goggles at the bottom of each photo):
Yes I have read the same, that the split is roughly 50/50 from regular seeds. But, my last grow of 4 regular seeds produced 3 females and 1 male. I have read of others who similarly got large majorities of one gender over the over. Who knows for sure, but yes I'd assume 50/50 would be the most likely (it'd be the one to choose if you were a betting person), but what you end up getting could turn out to be anything I guess.I've heard it's very reliably a 50% male 50% female split, but of course if you germinate 2 seeds, you might get two of one gender and then you'd need to germinate again.
...It looks like a double post of the same pic.
But is that actually a male? There appears to be pistils at several nodes. When I first looked at the 'male' part my eyes initially assumed it to be a cluster of early stage pollen balls at the bottom of the pictures, but when I put aside being told it is a male, now I am not so sure, it makes my point that when a picture is a little bit tricky to determine we can 'see' something that may not be there, as it almost looks like a female gender structure with 2 spent collapsed browned pistils coming out of it's top*? Underneath it, there is something else, it doesn't really look so much as a pollen ball but a little flat tip of something, unless it is a single pollen ball with a 'pointy crown' on a very very long thin pedestal, is that what it is?
But if those are pistils as well as pollen balls, then in that case wouldn't that make it a hermied female rather than male? Or perhaps those aren't pistils but a trick of the light?
Photo 6/3 - I think I see a pistil on that one...At this point I am thinking it might be male.
Thanks Carcass! Yes when viewing gender structures over multiple node sites there does appear quite a variation in their appearance. But so often the lighting doesn't help, or the image quality is grainy and poor, or just the view angle causes us to misidentify. That's why to me, that one needs to look at more than a single node, and get multiple good closeup pics.Great presentation, Stunger....very interesting how different the indicators can look before they show us what they are... it's almost like they have trouble deciding...
Photo 6/3 - I think I see a pistil on that one...
Might be an illusion, but it looks like a short pistil to me...
Cheers Emeraldo! Yep I'm hoping too. Today I chopped out the 3 plants I viewed as males. Yes I could be cautious and wait for pistil or ball confirmation, but I have formed a theory and applied it, so once clear and happy with the theory it doesn't make sense to doubt myself. If the outcome is different from my predictions then I'll take it on the chin and go back to the drawing board and try and improve the theory!Hey Stunger, I agree with everyone that you've really done a thorough job of gender ID here. For the reason given, I am now of the view that the only way to really know early on is to actually put the plants into flower. That doesn't mean one can't look for signs! I hope your choices turn out to be correct. Cheers, Emo
Just a suggestion but if you could circle ️ what you are seeing so we would know for sure what your looking at. Thanks. CLUpdate part 2 of 5 - Mulanje HP strain pair (Mulanje x Purple Honduras/Panama)
First Mulanje HP
Comment: This looks like a female, tall/long, it's swelling appears in the middle and not the base like a male. However, we are unable to view whether the base is 'female'.
Comment: This is a bit tricky the lefthand structure looks potentially like a female, but the righthand structure looks a little bit less so. Both structures have an 'armour' like appearance of their skin which I feel is more of a male quality. Both bases are not visible to evaluate.
Comment: The top (in focus) structure appears to be male because it ticks a number of 'male boxes', it appears to be sitting on a pedestal, it is very 'ball like' low in the structure, it may have a bit of a 'crab claw' developing, and the surface appearance looks more 'armour like'. On viewing this one, I am thinking that this looks to be a male.
Comment: Both structures appear curved/twisted suggesting a male 'crab claw' appearance. Their surface appearance is quite 'armour like'. While the base is not visible, this plant is looking more and more to be a male.
Comment: While only one structure is relatively clear, they nonetheless do not have a female shape, they are short and round at the base. While I wouldn't say they have a 'classical crab claw', they have a sort of 'fronded' crab claw. The lower structure also appears to be sitting on a pedestal. Overall very male like.
Comment: Curved, 'crab claw', strong armour appearance, base not visible.
Based on this photo set of the first Mulanje HP, there are too many male attributes, I am calling this to be Male
==== // ====
Second Mulanje HP
Comment: This has a good female shape, although the surface appearance looks a little 'armour like', but it doesn't appear to have a pedestal base. Looking hopeful as a female.
Comment: The top structure doesn't appear to be sitting on a base but nonetheless it looks a little armour like. The bottom structure appears to have a slight curve, is it male or just the angle of the pic? The base could be 'ball like' in the lower part but it could just be from the angle the picture was been taken from.
Comment: This is an example of a node which currently appears to have only one gender structure which looks very female in shape, and it has a very female base without a 'male' pedestal, and looks soft and even in it's surface appearance.
Comment: This also only has a gender structure on one side of the node. It looks very female in shape and surface appearance, as well as not being on a pedestal.
Comment: Very similar to the above 2. Looks very female.
Comment: These also look very female, no pedestal base is apparent.
Based on this photo set of the second Mulanje HP, it has many female attributes, I am calling this to be Female
Yes you did! - sorry, I was reading the caption above the pic...Re 6/3 - I made the following comment under that picture