@Badddoin super Charger is a massive plant and needs to be topped a lot. The love child of three Thai land races and then crossed with Angola Red, she is a true sativa hybrid with a 9-10 week flower. Mom tested 27% THC.
Today in the lab I tested wild cherry gelato at 30.1% total THC, very cool. Got some bag seeds from platinum Kush and Chunky Runtz as well.
@Wendel
When the plant begins flower it is a natural dark green color. Nutrient supply and air temperature play a big role in the final color of your plants. During the first few weeks of flower lots of nitrogen is necessary to fuel the rapid growth of buds. Continuing to feed heavy nitrogen past week 4 will encourage darker green color. A transition to a lighter nitrogen feed should begin around week 3. In rockwool and coco, a grower can fully control the nutrients available. This allows the grower to drop nitrogen and force the plant into senescence. Senescence is the plants shift towards death and total focus on reproductive organs—the flowers. Leaves begin to change color. A combination of the genetic makeup of the plant and available nutrients will then determine the color. Gradually dropping day and night temperatures throughout the flower cycle and shifting the light cycle from 12 to 10-11 hours will also encourage senescence. You want to create a Midwest October environment. Excess nitrogen tells the plant to keep growing, it can conflict with the other environmental factors and slow senescence.