hermie talk alright..

i guess my hermie's had to do with genetics.
picked seeds out of a "bag"
germinated them the same.
lighted them the same all from the sun.
put them in the ground at the same time as the others, same feed, same water.. and so on.

but ive read in the FAQs here on this site....

"""Hermaphrodites are generally viewed with disfavor. First, they will release pollen and ruin a sinsemelia crop, pollinating themselves and all of the other females in the room. Second, the resulting seeds are worthless, because hermaphrodite parents tend to pass on the tendency to their offspring.

Please note that occassionally specious staminate flowers will appear in the last days of flowering of a female plant. These do not drop pollen and their appearance is not considered evidence of deleterious hermaphroditism."""


this statement says that the resulting offspring from any kind of "hermie" pollen will cause the seed that it makes to also be hermie. is that right or did i read it wrong?
Stoner38024 Reviewed by Stoner38024 on . Infant female vs Unwanted light ?%? What are the odds that a just confirmed female will become hermie if accidentally exposed to approx 30 mins of unwanted low level light? Not direct light from a flashlight or anything like that. Is this an almost certainty; or "hit or miss" type thing? I'd be interested to hear if anyone has experienced this before without negative effects. Thanks! Rating: 5