Public Service Announcement:
@spyralout @SoLowDoughLow @Jesselikes2Grow @yougrowyourway @Texagonian @SmithsJunk
For full transparency: When trimming the first Ground Pounder that finished up there was one lone seed on a lower. There weren't any nanners present or visible on the plant. I have a full tray of pollinated clones in the center of the tent. I also had the outer edges of the tent lined with pollinated plants. I did possibly contaminate the tent on the last round of pollinations, (What I was originally thinking) but it's unconfirmed. I pollinated clone groups staggered a week apart. When placing the last pollinated group back into the flower tent, I realized I forgot to do my second wash before moving it in. I noticed some leaves were still covered with pollen. I always rinse twice. Once while in the veg rack before moving them out, and a second time once they're outside while enroute to the flower tent. In this particular instance, I actually forgot the second wash. So I'm uncertain if the pollen was neutralized completely or not. But there was one seed in the first Ground Pounder. I also immediately sprayed down those newly pollinated plants again once I noticed the pollen on there leaves still. But it could have potentially been a little too late for some lone pollen to find its way through the tent if it was in fact still viable.
Tonight I pulled all but four plants out for their 48 hours of darkness before chop. I was cutting most of the fan leaves off before the move and toward the end of this, I noticed dried male flower parts (most likely a nanner) stuck to the tip of my scissors. I have no idea who this came from but I began looking them over. I can't find or see any nanners anywhere on any of them. But I won't know for certain until I'm in deep, trimming. Nor will I know if they're seeded at all until then. If a sporadic nanner exposes itself at any point, I also won't know if it's viable pollen being released or if it's sterile. Unless of course I start finding seeds while trimming.
If I do find a fair amount of seeds, but no sporadic nanners anywhere, it could have very well been from the pollen contamination possibility. But I still couldn't be certain of that with what I saw today. So this is quite the mental conundrum for me and my test group.
With that said, I have never grown anything that spit out nanners, ever. Nor have I ever seen any on these throughout this entire test grow. All I know is what I saw today on the tip of my scissors. So I want to pass this information along to all of you, so you can be aware and stay vigilant looking for possible late flower nanners. I certainly wouldn't hold it against any of you if you didn't want to deal with it and culled or didn't grow any of the seeds. I just don't have all of the information yet, and I'm uncertain who it could possibly be from. It's throwing me for a loop. Nothing I've ever grown or used expressed this trait. So I'm not sure if one of these crosses brought it forward a little or not. I'm fairly confident it's not a dominant trait, because nothing has ever been visible or at least seen. And Solo, I'd still be willing to bet your mystery plant that was covered in them wasn't a Ground Pounder. If these girls threw one, it was a fucking stealthy ninja.
Even still, this little finding and uncertainty has taken a little wind out of my sail. Because I have to say almost all of these girls look absolutely gorgeous with their coloring, flowering structure, and trichome coverage. Even most of their aromas are just immaculate. One nose today was Grape Otter Pop Concentrate and another was freshly baked blueberry muffins. Both being strongly distinct, not faint. Even some of what I would consider the ugly flower structured phenotypes were covered in textured beach sand trichomes reminiscent of the BCK.
So it will be gut wrenching if I find any nanners or seeds during trim, and I end up getting back some off of the charts, super dank smoke reports back from Spyral. Because they already look the part.
I'm still keeping my fingers crossed everything turns out okay. But I needed to share this none the less. I greatly appreciate all of you helping me test these seeds, and like I mentioned before, if the risk or potential risk isn't worth it for your real estate, I totally understand.
That is all
Phylex