Approaching harvest now (day 75), though likely still another week or two. A week will be 5 weeks from the last pollination round, which has been long enough for most seeds to mature in my experience. I've occasionally checked trichomes, waiting for mostly cloudy.
Did I mention that I can't wait to try all of these?
My EC meter started going off the rails, probably because the battery is getting low. Now I know the coin cell battery is glued in, so I replaced it, and my new meter (an HM Digital COM-80)'s EC readings have consistently been about 20% higher. I haven't checked them both with a calibration solution yet, but I'm inclined to believe the new meter rather than the really cheaply made older one. I haven't been too specific about my nutrient mix, but I have been watering around 1650 us/cm (which the old meter said was ~1300), and for a couple days was giving a mix that was stronger, leading to a bit more tip burn throughout.
The seventh plant in the middle meant that I couldn't pull the trays a little closer together and get better light penetration down the outer sides, so some of the lower branches I pollinated didn't get a whole lot of light. Their seeds may be underdeveloped as a result. The branches with the seeds I care about most are doing just fine though -- I expect to get plenty of seeds off the Zamaldelica Express in front, the Auto Zamaldelica in the middle, and (probably) the Neville's Haze Ryder.
I didn't take everything out for individual pictures this time, because they're so top-heavy that the cups tip over really easily.
Everything looks pretty different here. There's some fading fan leaves throughout, but also some really crispy leaves that have dried out and curled up after getting light stress several weeks ago, probably made worse by the EC meter issue. There's a lot of smells, but the Zamaldelica Express and Neville's Haze Ryder in front dominate.
Center/back:
- Auto Zamaldelica.
Left, front to back:
- Zamaldelica Express (#3), with the (then) tallest cola supercropped sharply to the right. Lots of color, lots of resin, smells fantastic.
- Zamaldelica Express (#2), not quite as purple, not as filled out, and grew a few pollen sacks in early flower, but none since. I could have culled this one and moved the Auto Zamaldelica to one of the side trays.
- Hubbabubba Haze.
Right, front to back:
- Neville's Haze Ryder.
- Auto Power Plant.
- Ghost Toof.
Auto Power Plant.
The Auto Zamaldelica probably has the most light stressed / dried out leaves throughout. In spite of that, it's got several long, bulky upper colas now, and looks like it should yield well (for a solo cup).
In case the perspective makes it hard to tell, the roots have pushed the Auto Zamaldelica's coco mass up
three whole inches.
THE WHOLE CUP IS ONLY 5" TALL. I'm not sure if there's that much root growth throughout expanding the coco, a solid soup-can-sized mass of roots at the bottom, or what. I'm not even sure it's a good thing, though aside from making the plant extra prone to leaning/tipping it doesn't seem to be problematic. Adding a rubber training wire bumper around the AZ, APP, and GT coco stopped the leaning. I guess if I had fungus gnats it would give them easy access to the whole cup, but so far I've never had any pests.
The frost on the Ghost Toof runs quite a ways down. The trim on this one will not go to waste.
The HubbabubbaHaze looks structurally like the Hubbabubbasmelloscope I grew last year: long branches separating big chunky buds, and it has mostly white pistils. The HBSS still did at harvest (day 89), but the trichomes looked ready, and I don't think I harvested it early. Mysterious. I didn't take it out, but when I did last it had a distinct sweet pink bubblegum smell. (The HBSS smells more like tropical fruit or juicy fruit gum.)
The Neville's Haze Ryder also has plenty of dried out upper leaves. The pistils look like it's close to done, but the trichomes are still mostly clear. It's had a range of smells, first skunky, then sweet, now sweet + a little skunky + something I can't identify, I wonder how it will turn out after several weeks of curing.