New Grower The life cycle of auto flowering cannabis.

Another common question I see is when to switch autos from veg to bloom. Many people are under the impression that as soon as they see the first flowers it's time to switch. Perhaps a little explanation of the life cycle of autos will help to clarify this.

Weeks 1 - 3. Once you've started your seeds and they break the surface of the soil, they are in their seedling stage. The first set of leaves to appear will usually single fingered, followed by a second set that may still be single fingered or perhaps 3 fingered. Once that second set appears growth will start to accelerate as the new leaves provide more photosynthesis. This process will continue, more new leaves, faster growth. Depending on the type of soil in use, mild vegetative nutes can be introduced at week 2. By week 3 most plants will start to show their sex. Males will start to produce pollen sacks and females will display pistols.

Weeks 4 - 6. The plants are now entering a pre flowering stage. During this time the plants should exhibit explosive growth, often as much as a new set of nodes and 1" vertical growth a day. This is the time when they will gain most of their vertical height. Many people make the mistake of switching from vegetative to flowering nutrients at this point, assuming that since they see flowers it must be the proper time. This is incorrect. If the switch to flowering nutes is made at this time the vertical growth will stop and the plant will put it's energy into producing buds. If you need to keep your plants small, or want them to finish earlier, they by all means switch nutes at this point. But if you want to get the most out of your plants continue feeding vegetative nutes until you see the vertical growth slow and stop. Depending on the strain that will usually be sometime during week 5 or 6.

Weeks 7 - 9. By now vertical growth has stopped and the switch to flowering nutrients has been made. The buds will start to fill out and put on weight, becoming hard and tight. Pistols will start to change from white to brown, orange, red, etc. By now the plants will also have developed a strong smell. Toward the end of this phase the large primary and smaller secondary fan leaves will begin to turn yellow. This is an indication that the plant is moving toward the end of it's life.

Weeks 10 - 11. At this time flowering nutes should be discontinued and only plain pHed water fed to flush the remaining nutrients from the soil and improve the taste. Yellowing of the fan leaves will continue as the plant draws the stored energy from them. Eventually they will die and fall off. By the time that the smaller leaves that come from out of the buds will also start to turn yellow. Then it's time to harvest.

I know that many of you are thinking that the seed bank said the plants will finish in 8-9 weeks, so why are you saying they take 10-11? The claims made by the seed banks are somewhat deceptive. If you switch to flowering nutes at week 3 or 4 the plants can finish in the times the seed banks say but they will remain small and not reach their full potential yield. Years of growing by myself and others has shown that autos do best if you follow this time line.

Of course, there will always be variations depending on the strain, the environment, nutrients, etc. This information is meant to only serve as a general guideline.

For more detailed information on when to harvest your plants, please see: https://www.autoflower.org/f44/when-harvest-autos-your-leaves-will-tell-you-4889.html.

NOTE: This is an informational thread. Do not post specific questions about your grow here. Please start a new thread in the appropriate forum.
 
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No problem Wink. Give this method a try on your next grow. I think you'll be amazed at the difference when you leave them veg until vertical growth stops, especially in hydro. You should see a big increase in your yields.

i didnt mean to come off as arrogant or ignorant,i apologize to everyone for that,it is a good guide for most autoflower strains,i was just stating that in my situation my plants were done at 8 weeks,i have learned alot from that 1st autoflower grow,and am still working on getting better,still sticking with auto skunk mass getting average yields of 2 1/2 oz dry each plant finishing right around the 8 week mark. again i apologize to all on the site,this is a good site with alot of great info.thanks for correcting the info i put on here.i wasnt trying to misinform anyone.
 
thanks muddy,ill give it a whirl with this next cycle,ive been staggering crops every week to every other week,getting better each cycle.again i apologize for my ignorance.
 
i took your advice muddy and these things are turning into lil monsters.before theyd only get to around 1 1/2 ft.i got six going now that are entering the 7th week ranging from 2 1/2 -3 1/2 ft tall,all the side branches are as tall as the tops its gonna be crazy to see if they keep on going like they are.im hoping they keep on filling out like they are.thanks muddy.ill update when this ones finished
 
Would there be any advantage ( apart from more light) in adding red light into the last week of veg, so for example up to week 5 just blue, week 6 blue + red, week 7 just red ? ( assuming vert growth stops at week 7 , if not adjust accordingly) The reason i ask it that buds are happily forming at week 4 and if i go to end of week 6 with blue light i feel that the flowers could be missing out on the red. So if they had blue and red would they get the best of both world, veg growth from blue and flower growth from red
 
Well more light is always better, lol. Any time you have a mixed spectrum of colors the plant will benefit more. This is why LEDs are so successful with such little heat and consumption, they're focused spectrum. Running two CFLs wouldn't be as close, but it'd be a lot better than just 6500k.
 
Thanks, it was LED's that got me thinking about this. i think i will add some red to the last week of veging ( when my growth rate starts to even off)
 
Great article-it simplifies certain things enormously!
 
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Thank you for this info as I am anxiously awaiting my first ever,feminized autoflower seeds. Do you have any info on cfl/metal halide use on these plants? Do you know if the use of both will negatively affect my autopilot xxl?
 
Thanks and welcome to AFN. This thread isn't the place to answer your lighting question. There is a lot of information in the lighting forum that should help. If not, start a thread in the New Growers forum. Lots of people there who can help you out.

Thank you for this info as I am anxiously awaiting my first ever,feminized autoflower seeds. Do you have any info on cfl/metal halide use on these plants? Do you know if the use of both will negatively affect my autopilot xxl?
 

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