Mark30g~~
if it were me i would just leave the lights alone this go round, they will finish up fine, others may have a different opinion, i recommend castle seed co. you can find a link in the sponsors page,very reputable,prices are as good as anyone ,they will beat anyone's prices if you show them a better price, and offer a discount to 420magazine members of 10% code=420mag
hope this helps
thanks 12 just trying to do my part, want him to have success with his grow! motm huh? you gonna nom me? lol that would be funny as hell considering the current noms and last months fiasco, and if by some miracle i won, id have to donate the bpn to the runner up lol talk about deja vu! lol
Mark30g So do i keep my light cycle @ 8/16 or make the slow change to 11/13 but at this stage would it effect the buds or even worse for me turn hermie??
To prevent hermie from showing up stick with the current flowering cycle until you finish them through. Then try the 11/13 for new batch if you like. Check out the sponsor for seeds. Cheese and Diesel is common now all should carry them. If you use Castle Seed use promo code "420Mag" to get 10% off like BID mentioned.
The yield will vary on environment, grower's skill, and genetic. So if the seed is advertise to yield 500g per m2 then it means the plant is verged for 2 months and flower out for 2-3 months usually under optimal environment and 600-1000w lights and may have used CO2. May have even grown outdoor which can yield loads. I always take the advertised gram per m2 in half, so if they say 500g I don't expect to get more than 250g per m2. Again, could be the above mention reasons. Do your best with the best strains and enjoy the journey.
WoCha Thanks! I hope the Downtown Stumble lives up to its name...wait 9 months you'll might be able to try it.
bigirishdoode good advice! MOTM potential!!
GodSpeed Thanks man!
Yes my thoughts exactly I was also thinking to leave them this go around as fear ov losing what little yields I do have to hermi. Thanks big Irish doode certainly hope that my yield improves