MostWantedGens
Active member
same plant smells the same... mother plant or clone doesn't matter.
I find revegging plants to be the easiest thing to do with little to no extra work on my part. Whereas, admittedly, I have lost cuttings before due to neglect, forgetting about them, or things getting in the way and then they dry up before I get back to them.
I know...experience can be soooo over-rated, lol. But I have more than 10 years experience with the technique.re vegging wouldn't be possible if the plant was only designed to veg, flower, then die. it has evolved in a way so that it will adapt. it wont effect the quality or anything else if you reveg, because they are determined by genetics within the plants individual cells, there is theories about genetic drift etc but that's a whole other debate and not really proven in cannabis scientifically..
Once vegetative growth resumes, she's a happy camper.if I have to reveg I would never trim the root ball as it will slow down the revegging, if the plant had a big healthy root system in flower, it will need that healthy root system to sustain the new growth, plus it might cause extra stress and slow the process down.
I had a Swazi Skunk strain like that 10 years ago. Peppery flavors. Was my favorite sativa dom.Anyone notice their revegged girls smell different? My first grow from seed had a wonderful, strong black pepper smell, and since the reveg, she has yet to exhibit the smell again.
Pretty sure you can't fit it back into the seed... (it's original state) The only way I can think of, is to stress the girl to throw nanners, and pollinate one of her clones. This advanced process is a tad tricky, time-consuming and , not for the fumblefingered beginner, lol.Any hints to get the reveg plant to its original state?