flaw.less.finish
Active member
@dubi Nepal Jam @ 44N, loving the sun and cooler nights. Yellowing fast two weeks to go. Planted July first in 60 L tree pot organically grown cantaloupe terps right now.
How do you sift?end up as dry sift
She is having a flawless finish lovely resinous pheno, and very well grown!@dubi a weeks difference. Same flowers
Hello,
some updates on my balcony growing at 52° North. So far everthing goes great, the plants are in their final stage of flowering, it might be one or two more weeks until harvest is due. It‘s safe now to say that Nepal Jam is a great variety to grow on a balcony in Northern climates. We are now in full autumn weather with daytime temperatures of 14-20°C going down to 5-10°C at night and 11 hours of daytime light. So far no signs of mould, the plants still look healthy. The stem leaves all started yellowing two weeks ago, but I guess that’s normal at this time. It‘s been 21 weeks since I planted the seeds in Mai, so that would be about 22 weeks of growth time on a balcony, which is great. The flowering time was 8-10 weeks. So far the plants smell nicely, but not very strong. That’s great, because it won’t bother the neighbours very much and because it smells like honey, people wouldn’t guess so easily that I‘m growing cannabis. Growing is legal in my area, but still I don’t need everyone to know what I‘m doing.
I‘m left with two plants that represent two very distinct phenos. They show their distinction even more now that the weather has changed. First one I would call the typical Nepal Jam, as shown in most photos here in the thread. The top leaves turned purple recently, which is the most visible difference from the other plant. Also it’s smaller and the buds are a bit shorter. The smell is a slight tone of honey on top of a typical cannabis-smell.
The other plant tends more towards the Jamaican I guess (@dubi ?). It’s still green, no signs of purple. The plant is a bit larger and the buds are longer. The smell is stronger and it‘s also honey, but a bit more spicy, like honeycomb and with a hint of linden tree flowers.
I recorded some nerdy data, you can jump right to the photos when this is too much information for you, lol. The first photos are the typical pheno, then the jamaican.
trait: typical pheno | jamaican pheno
lenght: 111 cm | 126 cm
number of internodes below top cola: 10 | 10
average bud length: 15,4 cm | 22,9 cm
longest bud: 26 cm | 43 cm
stem diameter: 1,1 cm | 1,7 cm
pot size: 9 L | 5 L
As you can see the jamaican pheno has longer buds even though it’s in a smaller pot.
Still have to wait for the smoking experience to make a final judgement on which is the better pheno. View attachment 19079290 View attachment 19079291 View attachment 19079292 View attachment 19079293 View attachment 19079294 View attachment 19079295 View attachment 19079296 View attachment 19079297 View attachment 19079298
South-west balcony around 53 N. The plan was to starve her a bit to make her finish quicker. But maybe a bit too much? Not sure how this will work out.
From the side:
View attachment 19070646
From the front:
View attachment 19070647
Detail
View attachment 19070648
Thanks @dubi !Excellent effort at 52ºN @Elrond glad this genetics are dealing well there with the cold and outdoor conditions. I agree on your pheno identification, first plant with more purple colors and resin on the leaves hashplant type is the Nepalese side, while the greener with lesser resins on the leaves is more Jamaican influenced, yet both showing lots of sativa traits in flower structure and calyxes.
@dubi a weeks difference. Same flowers
@dubi What pheno do you think mine is?