Quote Originally Posted by Rusty Trichome
Wrong in concept. Nanners are male flowers. (pollen sacks) Whether on a male or female plant...a nanner is a nanner.

Pistils are a tube that catch the pollen and delivers it to the zygote in the calyx. The union of the two makes the seed. (readers digest version) I've never seen nor ever heard of a hermaphrodetic calyx.

Again...Wrong. Pistils are often damaged or age, and are replaced. Sometimes two, sometimes 3 or 4 pistils can emerge from a single calyx. Tiz not in any form, a sign of hermaphrodism.

If the seeds you grow led you to these conclusions, perhaps you should find another source for your seeds. I wonder how many healthy plants that were perfectly fine, you've killed-off because of this?


Thanks Rusty. I'll keep future posts in check,.... but I've got flowers on my suspect hermi plant, that as the pistils begin growing out of the calyx generate 5-6 from almost every flower. They are all a little contorted, and most of them seem to hang up in the calyx. Aren't there 5-6 little glands that hang down off of a pollen sack once it opens? This is where I draw the conclusion of excess pistils.

(Forgive me on my lack of proper names, still learning and all. And Thanks for the proper spelling on calyx and pistil! :thumbsup: )


As for the last question, NONE! I've actually kept plants that I knew were a risk for asexuality, much to my greater disappointment. All plants I've grown are clones.


So,.... exactly what am I looking at in the first picture? That sure isn't 2 pistils! Looks, (to me anyway) like a calyx with one pistil and a (I'm guessing here) complete pollen sack?

So wouldn't it be a hermaphrodite calyx?