Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Need Help!!Is it too late to revert back to veg?

Collapse
X
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Need Help!!Is it too late to revert back to veg?

    This is my first grow i'm doing from a plant I got from a friend who was growing outside. I have brought the plant inside and tranferred her from the soil pot to a 5 gal. bucket with hydroton as my medium and after just 5 days i notices what looked like white pistold with almost red to amber tips coming out of the leaves. I have her under (2) 2ft. T5 CFL's at 6500k on an 18/6 cycle. It looks like the plant started flowering while it was outside however I want to know if I can still revert her back to vegitation to use as my mother plant or just put her to flower ? I am using General hydro's Flora micro,grow&bloom as my nutes and have (6) 360 sprayers set to feed every 2hrs. for minute sprays. Since I am only working with this one plant is it necessary to use a 400watt HPS for flowers or should i use a 250 to avoid too much heat? Please advise as I do not want to ruin a perfectly good prescription... I have added a few pics to see if anyone can see the plant and can give me some advice... Thanks
    Attached Files
    Last edited by bebo1027; 11-18-2010, 12:39 PM. Reason: typo

  • #2
    dude that plant is small and already stated budding. START OVER
    Dont bring bugs from outside in. Rule #1
    There is no such thing as re-vegging. If you vegged then started flower there is no going back if you want the plant to preform.

    Comment


    • #3
      Regen.

      REGENERATION

      It is possible to harvest plants and then rejuvenate them vegetatively for a 2nd and even 3rd harvest. A second harvest can be realized in as little as 6-8 weeks. Since the plant's stalk, and roots are already formed, the plant can produce a second, even third harvest of buds in a little more than half the time of the original harvest. When harvesting, take off the top 1/3rd of the plant. Leave most healthy fan leaves in the middle of the plant, cutting buds off branches carefully. On the lower 1/3rd of the plant, take off end flowers, but leave several small flowers on each branch. These will be the part of the plant that is regenerated. The more buds you leave on the plant, the faster it will regenerate. Feed the plant some Miracle Grow or any high nitrogen plant food immediately after harvest. When you intend to regenerate a plant, make sure it never gets too starved for nitrogen as it is maturing, or all the sun leaves will fall off, and your plant will not have enough leaves to live after being harvested.

      Harvested plants can come inside for rejuvenation under continuous light or are left outside in Summer to rejuvenate in the natural long days. It will take 7-14 days to see signs of new growth when regenerating a plant. As stated before, and in contrast to normal growth patterns, lower branches will be the first to sprout new vegetative growth. Allow the plant to grow a little vegetatively, then take outside again to reflower. Or keep inside for vegetative cuttings. You now have two or three generations of plants growing, and will need more space outside. But you will now be harvesting twice as often. As often as every 30 days, since you have new clones or seedlings growing, vegetative plants ready to flower, and regenerated plants flowering too.

      Regenerating indoors can create problems if your plants are infected with pests. It may be best to have a separate area indoors that will not allow your plants to infect the main indoor area. An alternative to regenerating indoors is to regenerate outdoors in the Summer. Just take a harvest in June, then allow the plant to regenerate by leaving some lower buds on the plant, and leaving the middle 1/3rd of the plant's leaves at harvest. Feed it nitrogen, and make sure it gets lots of sun. It will regenerate all Summer and be quite large by Fall, when it will start to flower again naturally.

      Comment


      • #4
        We have just published an article on regenerating marijuana plants.

        Comment

        Working...
        X