Just Finished Backyard Prep....

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buddogmutt said:
they've already reveged...all but the Super Silver Haze(will be done in a month or so)...so im just letting them do their thing...its all in natures hands..according to the sun rise/set calender my days hrs will stay the same til mid-late july...so if their budding now i cant see a reveg in the future..
.....
 
Mine did this here in NorCal last season dude. Well the first 2 I started. Look at my sig from last years grow. Mine took a loooooongg whole until they revegged, and then didn't flower again until fall harest. I bet your still in for a long reveg come a month or so from now dude. I did manage to get a decent double harvest off the one of mine though.
 
i like to give a little extra nitrogen a couple days after transplant when losing time. It will slow the flowering and allow them to stay in veg or reveg faster. next time i guess. looks great good luck. sativa's need longer flower anyways and if there early rain it would be nice to be ahead
 
i have so got it figured out...plants are definitely in re-veg...i was wondering because i saw no signs of a re-veg until today...so aparently theres a stage of just stagnated growth as the plant goes from budding to a reveg...Even the Super Silver Haze is in reveg....i was hoping to get a few premature buds off...but as you can see they never got mature enough for a premature picking...so now the heights should really start kicking in....gonna be a fun ride now that reveg is official!!!

and man, the one with the goofy bird in the pic is one plant...that baby is going to be a beast....
 
Yeah man, that's what I was thinkin. They're definitely gonna look funky, just wait. Green mojo dude
 
looking good dogmutt..a few more weeks and you should see regular leafs on that reveg:aok:
 
4u2sm0ke said:
looking good dogmutt..a few more weeks and you should see regular leafs on that reveg:aok:

thats what i was figuring...in my other thread im documenting the reveg stages...and you can see the what were once single leaves go to 3 then 5...so im learning those single leaves are only single for a week by the 7th-10th day..their 5 blade leaves...
 
That is just what my reveg medicine woman looks like. and the clones i just took. Hope it doesn't stress the clones too much.
 
Rosebud said:
That is just what my reveg medicine woman looks like. and the clones i just took. Hope it doesn't stress the clones too much.[/q


.....its a strange process to watch....
 
found one sun bathing...notice how much bigger theyve gotten..and the Super Silver Haze
 
wow thats kool, interesting pics, im gonna go ahead and assume mantis are benificial bugs, very cool.
 
dman1234 said:
wow thats kool, interesting pics, im gonna go ahead and assume mantis are benificial bugs, very cool.

Check it out...best all natural pest control...



Praying Mantids make fun garden pets. Mantids eat anything and everything they can catch! They constantly entertain observers while they eat insects all summer long.
Mantids eat most pest insects. Mites and their eggs are the preferred diet of these general predators. They also devour aphids, thrips, flies, maggots, small caterpillars, leafhoppers, grubs and other soft-bodied insects. Mature mantids feed on larger caterpillars, earwigs, chinch bugs, sow bugs, beetles, grasshoppers, and other larger insects. Mantids stay in your garden and wait for an insect to walk by. They then grab it with their strong grasping forelegs and begin munching away.

They make fascinating pets and are fun to watch. Praying Mantids are to shipped gardeners as egg cases, each of which contains about 200 baby mantids.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION: The Chinese mantid is one of the largest mantids. A big female can grow to a length of up to 10.5 centimeters (over 4 inches!). The front legs are modified for capturing prey with lightning speed. Rows of sharp spines on the inside of the legs prevent the prey from escaping. Mantids often hold their front legs in a praying position, thus the name - praying mantid. Males praying mantids can fly but females can not.



Mantids range in color from bright green to brownish-gray. They are the only insects that can look over their shoulder. Mantids are well equipped for camouflage. Many have a leafy, twiggy appearance. They range in size from 3/4 " to 5 inches long.

FEEDING: Mantids are predators and feed largely on other insects and invertebrates. They will eat just about anything, which means they are just as likely to eat a leafhopper as a honeybee. The smaller the mantid, the smaller the prey it eats. Most mantids need to eat at least one cricket or large bug per day. The exact number and size of the bugs a mantid needs to eat will depend upon the size of the mantid and how hungry it is. Young mantids eat small fruit flies, pinhead crickets, and other very small insects such as aphids.


 
super silver haze still budding nicely....everything else still revegging....
 

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