New Grower When to harvest autos? Your leaves will tell you.

One of the most frequently asked questions is how do I know when my autos are ready to pick? The convention wisdom from growing photo period plants was to watch for color change in the trichomes, or crystals. For an uplifting high, harvest when the trichomes are all cloudy, for more of a stone, wait till a percentage have turned amber. Sound advice, for photos. But autos are a little different. While some strains have shown amber trics, many do not.

So how do I know when they are ready? I watch the the fan leaves. Over the past several years of growing autos I started taking samples at various stages of growth to evaluate the high. I tend to prefer my smoke with a little stone so began to leave them longer than the 8-9 weeks that are advertised. I find that around 11-12 weeks the plants are ripe for me. I also began to see a correlation between the color of the fan leaves, the color of the trics and the high/stone quality of the smoke at the various sample intervals. It seemed that the greener the fan leaves, the more clear trics the buds had. As the fan leaves started to yellow and die off, the trics became less clear and more milky. By the time that all the fan leaves had died off and the bud leaves were starting to yellow, I got the quality of smoke I wanted. At that time most of the trics were now milky with no, or only a few, clear ones. Here are some examples:

AA 2.JPGAA 011.JPGOnyx and AA 014.jpgAA 1.JPG

I've found this to be a very reliable method. It takes about 3 weeks for the fan leaves to die off. During that time the buds will continue to fatten up as the plant uses the energy stored in the fan leaves. So when I see my leaves start to yellow, I wait a week, then begin cleansing them. Two weeks later they will be well cleansed and read to harvest.

Of course there will be other factors such as genetics, lighting, nutrients, pot size, etc. that will effect how long a plant takes. But as a general guide for when to pick, just watch your leaves.

NOTE: If you have questions regarding your personal grow, please post them in the appropriate forum and not in this thread.
 
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Just a nice smoke would be nice I'm sick of being ripped off it smells so dam good That sweet Mango I guess a few more grows it should become more obvious they certainly more tricky indoors .Mother Nature outdoors with Phenos seem a walk in the park in comparison but hey let's face it these are really nice when there ready they are becoming really interesting I'm working on a perpetual
Grow Lmao ✌
 
Many Thanks

Another fine piece of information Muddy! Many thanks to you and of the other helpful souls at AFN!!!!:You are an Angel..:
 
Hi Muddy
Thanks for sharing your knowledge :)
One question... what kind do you have in those pictures that you post at the beginning of this thread??
 
Hi Muddy
Thanks for sharing your knowledge :)
One question... what kind do you have in those pictures that you post at the beginning of this thread??

You're very welcome. Those were some Auto Assassins from Short Stuff Seeds.
 
hey all, new to the site and to autos. I have a few photoperiod harvests under my belt.

My question is to the OP, i know that autos dont like stress, how did you combat that in making your plants (that are pictured) not take the tradition x-mas tree shape. Is that genetics or did you preform LST? thanks in advance
 
hey all, new to the site and to autos. I have a few photoperiod harvests under my belt.

My question is to the OP, i know that autos dont like stress, how did you combat that in making your plants (that are pictured) not take the tradition x-mas tree shape. Is that genetics or did you preform LST? thanks in advance

As you get into growing autos you will find a few differences between them and photos. Some of the sativa dominant autos will display the classic christmas tree shape but generally speaking you will find three different dominant phenotypes. A tall one with multiple side branching, a shorter one with some side branching, and a bush pheno. That shorter, less desirable pheno is being bred out and many strains no longer show it. The ones in my pictures were not LSTed and are showing natural development. Most auto strains will handle LSTing with little to no stress to the plant.
 
I have a question. So I told someone about this thread on a photo fourm and I got this response.
My understanding is that after x number of weeks they start to die. That is actually one of the reasons that some people do not grow autos. You have x number of weeks and then the trichs start degrading. Is this incorrect? Do they somehow (?!?) just keep maturing...something even photoperiod plants do not do? This is quite an unusual phenomenon for any cannabis plant, but especially autos.

So is that true? Do auto trichs start degrading when it starts reaching the end of its life?
 

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