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Killer A5 Haze

libre

Active member
:wave:
 

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El Quijote

Well-known member
Killer A5 Haze ya empezó a florecer para el día 10 de agosto va muy rápida en floración ramas muy cargadas creo que va a ser una planta muy productiva
 

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FletchF.Fletch

Well-known member
420club
How long did you let her veg?

Hi Humple,

She vegged for over a Month under T5HOs, but only in a Grodan 1.5" starter cube. I can keep them small until it's time to put them into Hugo cubes. It kind of keeps them contained at first. Pretty sure June 20 or 21 was when they were upcubed and put on 12/12.
 

Cactus Squatter

Well-known member
Here are the two different phenos I have currently of the KA5H that are growing from clones.

KA5H1 hasn’t started flowering yet but is in full blown stretch mode. I’m not positive, but I believe this one falls towards the Malawi side a little more due to its N sensitivity compared to the other. I can’t push this one.
KA5H2 is flowering along nicely already. This one, aside from the early flowering seemed to lean more Haze dominant. This plant likes to be fed.

I wish I could get full pictures of them because they’re absolute monsters. If they weren’t strapped down to a pipe frame they’d easily be at 10ft tall right now. Really stoked for fall.

These have also been mostly left alone by the spider mite army of FML that has been plaguing me all year.
they go after my Golden Tiger a little and my Malawi x Panama, but thankfully nothing like my poor Destroyer. They love that thing.
 

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flylowgethigh

Non-growing Lurker
ICMag Donor
Where do you guys get those skinny leaves? My KA5H is also exploding in size. I had to incorporate a net to keep KA5H in it's own territory.

It is the front left plant. Not flowering yet.

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RizlaMan

Active member
Killer A5 Haze at 33N.

This plant was started indoors around the first of the year and went outside in early March where it didn't start budding until days were 13 hours long in late April. By June it was battling bud rot on the larfy-buddage that formed before it went back into vegetative growth. An ounce or so of the larf was pruned (it was potent) from the plant in hopes it would reveg better without it. The plant looked like it was doing well, got roughly 2 meters high and a meter or so thick. The plant was manifold trained early on and had a dozen limbs of roughly equal size growing vertically from the horizontal main stalk.

A couple weeks ago I checked in the noon sun at near 100F/40C and it looked slightly drooped, which is normal when it's hot. Went back two days ago to check on it at the start of 13 hours of light and half the plant was dead and dry. The remaining stalks were half dead and when not much pressure was applied they all failed and revealed this grayish/black moldy-looking matter on the inside of the stalks and the horizontal main stalk/stem.

At least got some leaves for brownies and a clone that is budding indoors. For me this reaffirms how it is counter-effective to start an outdoor plant early, during late winter, indoors for either a fall harvest or a spring harvest followed by revegging the plant. They never seem to do as well as plants started in mid/late spring, then grown outdoors for a fall harvest.

I think it is bud rot, which took hold in the larfy-buddage that formed after it didn't make a spring harvest, that eventually colonized the entire plant. It was enabled by the near 100% humidity that is common here in the summer and the dew drenched mornings. I would appreciate insight and feedback from others as to what killed the Killer A5 Haze.

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El Quijote

Well-known member
Killer A5 Haze 2 semana de floración va despacio el ritmo de floración, creció mucho la planta ,muy ramificada seguro que sera muy productiva, planta muy bella ☺
 

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RED 1

Well-known member
Killer A5 Haze at 33N.

This plant was started indoors around the first of the year and went outside in early March where it didn't start budding until days were 13 hours long in late April. By June it was battling bud rot on the larfy-buddage that formed before it went back into vegetative growth. An ounce or so of the larf was pruned (it was potent) from the plant in hopes it would reveg better without it. The plant looked like it was doing well, got roughly 2 meters high and a meter or so thick. The plant was manifold trained early on and had a dozen limbs of roughly equal size growing vertically from the horizontal main stalk.

A couple weeks ago I checked in the noon sun at near 100F/40C and it looked slightly drooped, which is normal when it's hot. Went back two days ago to check on it at the start of 13 hours of light and half the plant was dead and dry. The remaining stalks were half dead and when not much pressure was applied they all failed and revealed this grayish/black moldy-looking matter on the inside of the stalks and the horizontal main stalk/stem.

At least got some leaves for brownies and a clone that is budding indoors. For me this reaffirms how it is counter-effective to start an outdoor plant early, during late winter, indoors for either a fall harvest or a spring harvest followed by revegging the plant. They never seem to do as well as plants started in mid/late spring, then grown outdoors for a fall harvest.

I think it is bud rot, which took hold in the larfy-buddage that formed after it didn't make a spring harvest, that eventually colonized the entire plant. It was enabled by the near 100% humidity that is common here in the summer and the dew drenched mornings. I would appreciate insight and feedback from others as to what killed the Killer A5 Haze.

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I feel you need to work on your soil,so it drains excess water
What was the state of the rooting system?
Was outdoor area treated with some sort of pest repelant,etc?
Top soil cannot breath,if,that's grass,so many roots visible
 

RizlaMan

Active member
I feel you need to work on your soil,so it drains excess water
What was the state of the rooting system?
Was outdoor area treated with some sort of pest repelant,etc?
Top soil cannot breath,if,that's grass,so many roots visible

Thanks for the feedback.

Did not examine the roots thoroughly, but they were not easy to pull out of the ground. Did not see any pathology, though there still could have been some. No pest repellent was used. Probably need to make the dirt more able to drain. The native soil was mucky sand and clay. A c. 30 gallon hole was dug then the native soil was mixed with 5-20 gallons each of coco coir, peat moss, compost, and composted chicken manure. When the hole was initially dug in November of last year water was struck within a meter of the surface. There have been successful harvests within 20 meters of this hole over several years. It seems Haze and Thia never make it outdoors. Perhaps going forward the dirt must drain better/be more aerated and only grow indica or majority indica plants.
 

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