View Full Version : moving flowring plant
orisal
08-14-2010, 10:11 AM
hi. my name is ori
im not from the us so sorry about my english
i have onley 1 plant in outdoor.. yesterday i i went to give heme water and sow
that somwone cut the main cola and 4 steeks head
so i move heme but he is on 1.5-2 weeks on flowering and some side roots has beet cuted (not the main root) his not luck like he is on trauma
it will influence him? if yes..so how??
and about the 5 bads that he lost (:mad::mad:) after start flowering it will gonna grow them back?
thank you
ori:hippy::hippy:
Rusty Trichome
08-14-2010, 01:55 PM
Sounds like major damage. Can you upload a picture?
orisal
08-15-2010, 11:17 AM
i do not have a pictuers but i so today that 5-4 cupple of lives died.
the first lives of the first stiks died and 5-4 of the big lives died
orisal
08-15-2010, 01:15 PM
befor the transformation 110 c"m
seventhchild
08-15-2010, 03:15 PM
it will influence him? if yes..so how??
and about the 5 bads that he lost (:mad::mad:) after start flowering it will gonna grow them back?
thank you
ori:hippy::hippy:if your plant is 2 weeks into flowering the buds will NOT grow back, the remaining growth MAY be thicker than normal but will never equal what was removed . the plant may start developing MALE FLOWERS or stop growing completely or finish flowering normally. at least you still have 1/2 a plant to work with. i suggest you treat her gently for the next week or two, no food and no direct sunlight .when/if you see new growth feed lightly and start letting her have more light.
Rusty Trichome
08-15-2010, 03:39 PM
Nice looking sativa, considering what it's been through. When will your local weather demand you harvest 'em? Should be enough time left for healing, more vegetative growth, and flowering, I'd think...depending on the strain's normal length of flowering.
It won't re-grow the missing parts, but they will be replaced with other growth. The side branches will become the new cola's, and they'll usually compete to be the mainstem. (the tallest shoot)
Roots grow back quickly, especially with some TLC. Not something I'd worry about, and there's nothing you can do about it anyway.
Avoid splashing water and mud on the injuries. (bacteria and such)
Like already mentioned, watch for nanners. Pluck 'em if you find 'em.
Keep your fingers crossed. :thumbsup:
orisal
08-15-2010, 04:24 PM
Nice looking sativa, considering what it's been through. When will your local weather demand you harvest 'em?
Roots grow back quickly, especially with some TLC. Not something I'd worry about, and there's nothing you can do about it anyway.
Like already mentioned, watch for nanners. Pluck 'em if you find 'em.
Keep your fingers crossed. :thumbsup:
thank you man
here harvest time is on october
and about what you say "Roots grow back quickly" is right even he in flowering
so i have 1.5-2 month for harvest hope nobody will find him on the new place
what do you mean " Should be enough time left for healing, more vegetative growth, and flowering, I'd think...depending on the strain's normal length of flowering"
even that the nights are getting longer now and that he started flowering there a chans that he will re grow
and what is TLC??
i have bio grow
fish mix
bio bloom
and top max
its helping me?
thank you all :hippy::hippy:
sorry for the bad english:rastasmoke:
Rusty Trichome
08-15-2010, 07:38 PM
Norhtern latitudes have a shorter timeframe to work with than the lower latitudes. Some sativa dominate strains can take 3-4 months to fully mature. If yours is an 8 week strain, then all the better.
TLC is tender loving care. Don't abuse her with additional transplanting, changing schedules, overwatering or underwatering...
Didn't look to me like full-blown flowering, more like preflowers. But, I haven't done an outdoor grow in over twenty years.
Indoors, were I to put a damaged plant directly into flowering (12 hours of darkness) the plant wouldn't get a chance to recover from the trauma of losing a cola, and would likely be stressed, stunted and would likely become a hermaphrodite. Even a couple of weeks of 14 hours of daylight would give her the chance to heal and continue her journey without further problems. Perhaps a little bit shorter, but healthy.
Would follow the manufacturers recomendations, and use the correct nutrient for the appropriate season/cycle. Don't push her hard with nutrients or additives. Perhaps half-strength for the next week or two, or until new growth is seen. I've not used the BioBloom nor the Top Max specifically, but the fish fertilizer I can't use in veg. (even the deodorized stuff is too stinky to use indoors) I do use a humic acid product called Soil Syrup (leonardite) which is good for root stimulation and growth. The Top Max is likely similar, and should be fine. Your plant looked fine before, I'd keep doing what you were doing.
seventhchild: Care to elaborate on your negative rep, and the reason for it? Not that it really matters, as rep points do not determine how I answer posts, but am curious why you bad repped my post above. I've re-read it and do not find it at all rude to the OP. Do YOU feel slighted or feel I was being rude to you?
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.