Hi @Twelve1 I didn’t inspect yesterday or this morning. I will inspect tomorrow morning and let you know how it looks.
The last time I inspected, I was nearly certain that I saw pistils here and there but also little balls on stalks.
Edit: The reason that I don’t rush down in inspect now is that I must rearrange the plants to get BUR-2 near my chair for inspections. It is like the little puzzles that we had as kids where you would slide tiles around a square matrix to move them into to particular pattern or picture. I don’t know what they were called.
After a bit of poking about, I think that they were called “Slide Tile Puzzles”. My brother and I loved them. Mom put them in our Christmas stockings each year.
The Burmese are 45 days old. It is time to flip to flower. I normally flip sometime between 55 and 63 days old. If I wait that long with these, I will lose control of the grow during the stretch. Even flipping now will be a bit crazy.
Looking awesome Sir. I hope they flower faster than the Shelavathi’s I failed at, twice. 16 ish weeks in flower and the buds were just forming. was down to 10 hours per day.
I was on 12/12 for about 14 of them weeks. Mine only stretched about a foot during them weeks. Not sure what was happening. I really want to finish one of them.
The most interesting thing about sheelavathi that we ascertained is the novelty of its terpene profile because the moment you come near the plant you can definitely smell wild flowers mixed with spices, but the taste is more inclined towards pine and hashish with undertones of flowers that will leave your senses charmed. sheelavathi has been crowned as one of the most beloved strains of india in a very short time and reasons, well; the effects – Its a double decker effect and potency coupled with the calming serenity/relaxation which creates a perfectly balanced high.
Both frames will be full before I know it. I will tuck the tops under the netting until the frames are full. When the frames are full I will let them grow vertically to form colas.