New Grower are autoflower hermie seeds feminized or will they grow to be hermies to?

How is it possible for a self-pollinated female plant to EVER produce a male offspring With all X 's and no Y chromosomes in the punnet squares? Wouldn't the seeds be guaranteed to be feminized?

Im sure the plants will be more proned to hermi ing themselves, under similar conditions. Did they pop banners because of environmental factors that can be fixed to prevent hermaphrodite s in your next run, or were they very sensitive to stress? If conditions were great and you ended up with alot of seeds I would be wary. If it was only a few, and you can stomach the risk of the unknown, you could probably grow them out. Be diligent an check under their skirts regularly though to make sure there's no funny business going on. You probably should just stash them away for emergency seeds incase you are ever in dire straits, if you have other seeds you could plant next run.
 
How is it possible for a self-pollinated female plant to EVER produce a male offspring With all X 's and no Y chromosomes in the punnet squares? Wouldn't the seeds be guaranteed to be feminized?

Im sure the plants will be more proned to hermi ing themselves, under similar conditions. Did they pop banners because of environmental factors that can be fixed to prevent hermaphrodite s in your next run, or were they very sensitive to stress? If conditions were great and you ended up with alot of seeds I would be wary. If it was only a few, and you can stomach the risk of the unknown, you could probably grow them out. Be diligent an check under their skirts regularly though to make sure there's no funny business going on. You probably should just stash them away for emergency seeds incase you are ever in dire straits, if you have other seeds you could plant next run.

because said plant carries both chromosomes , it just had the female one dominant

ive grown many hermie offspring over the years and found males quite often , one strain (local un-named) was bragged about so much i foolishly grew it for a year before getting sick of the seeded bud , it consistantly gave male/female offspring within the hermie seeds , and yes the females from those seeds also hermied BAD

it all depends on the hermie types , some breed what they claim to be fems by allowing a plant to go way beyond normal life thereby throwing late nanners , some plants throw balls as soon as it goes 12/12 or in the case of an auto as soon as it begins to flower , the ones throwing early balls are especially nasty and should be avoided , the seeds from them are hardly worth feeding to birds

peace
 
because said plant carries both chromosomes , it just had the female one dominant

ive grown many hermie offspring over the years and found males quite often , one strain (local un-named) was bragged about so much i foolishly grew it for a year before getting sick of the seeded bud , it consistantly gave male/female offspring within the hermie seeds , and yes the females from those seeds also hermied BAD

it all depends on the hermie types , some breed what they claim to be fems by allowing a plant to go way beyond normal life thereby throwing late nanners , some plants throw balls as soon as it goes 12/12 or in the case of an auto as soon as it begins to flower , the ones throwing early balls are especially nasty and should be avoided , the seeds from them are hardly worth feeding to birds

peace

Good info, thanks!

Have you noticed male offspring using CS, or is that only typical of traditional hermies?

I recently crossed a white widow and Jack herrer, and one plant in particular is an absolute standout. A monster bush that keeps vegging. At 50 days it is FINALLY beginning to show sex, but it is a male... I was planning on using this plant for breeding because of its incredible size, and perfect stature. Now I don't think it would be a wise idea, because something funny is going on...

So I guess my question is a male plant from feminized seeds a genetic defect, or just a Christmas miracle? As vigorous as its growth has been, I don't want an army of mongoloid children when I decide to grow out its seeds haha
 
Good info, thanks!

Have you noticed male offspring using CS, or is that only typical of traditional hermies?

I recently crossed a white widow and Jack herrer, and one plant in particular is an absolute standout. A monster bush that keeps vegging. At 50 days it is FINALLY beginning to show sex, but it is a male... I was planning on using this plant for breeding because of its incredible size, and perfect stature. Now I don't think it would be a wise idea, because something funny is going on...

So I guess my question is a male plant from feminized seeds a genetic defect, or just a Christmas miracle? As vigorous as its growth has been, I don't want an army of mongoloid children when I decide to grow out its seeds haha

so far ive not found or had a single male reported from any c.s made fems ive made , i have however gotten one full blown hermie and i can not for the life of me figure out why , ive been useing the same mother and clones from her for a long time and even though it is og kush (originally a hermie bag seed strain) i see very minimal hermie issue , other then the one freek plant , it was planted in a batch of 80 plants all from the same seed lot and was the only one to do this , very strange and ill prolly never know why

peace
 
I have never had a hermie when the breeder used C.S either Bob
 
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