I found some nanners on two of my plants. It appears to be seeded the other one not yet and the rest of the plants seem fine. They were small and under the canopy. It’s only a few under the canopy area is where I found them. What to do?
3 Comments
Nay Hay
on June 23, 2022 at 10:09 am
keep on scouting with a water sprayer in hand to mist any pollen or suspected pollen sacks you see. If the humidity is high I’ll use hydrogen peroxide (3% or less) to deactivate pollen and maybe kill a few mold spores along the way.
You’ll have some seedy bud, so break out the cleaning tray.
Water will deactivate the pollen and is a good bet to keep down pollination. Depending how many there are, I would grab a pair of tweezers and pluck them off after a spray of water. If there’s a ton I would start to consider how close to chop day it is and starting weighing the pros and cons of getting rid of those plants, chopping early, as well as maybe using Winter Frost to bring chop day a little earlier while also getting the most weight if that’s a concern. If yield isn’t a concern and quality is I’d recommend plucking if there’s a low nanner count and tossing the plants if there’s too many to manage. A couple seeds here and there doesn’t ruin a crop and can still produce some dank with beanie babies to enjoy popping one way or another.
Might be time to ask. Is chopping two plants down now worse the. Pollinating your entire room?? Honestly by the look of how far along you are. I don’t think the seeds would have time to form and mature regardless
keep on scouting with a water sprayer in hand to mist any pollen or suspected pollen sacks you see. If the humidity is high I’ll use hydrogen peroxide (3% or less) to deactivate pollen and maybe kill a few mold spores along the way.
You’ll have some seedy bud, so break out the cleaning tray.
Water will deactivate the pollen and is a good bet to keep down pollination. Depending how many there are, I would grab a pair of tweezers and pluck them off after a spray of water. If there’s a ton I would start to consider how close to chop day it is and starting weighing the pros and cons of getting rid of those plants, chopping early, as well as maybe using Winter Frost to bring chop day a little earlier while also getting the most weight if that’s a concern. If yield isn’t a concern and quality is I’d recommend plucking if there’s a low nanner count and tossing the plants if there’s too many to manage. A couple seeds here and there doesn’t ruin a crop and can still produce some dank with beanie babies to enjoy popping one way or another.
Might be time to ask. Is chopping two plants down now worse the. Pollinating your entire room?? Honestly by the look of how far along you are. I don’t think the seeds would have time to form and mature regardless