Seeds From Amsterdam
Marijuana seeds from Amsterdam.Indoor-outdoor strains,unique feminized marijuana seeds and cup winners cannabis seeds from Amsterdam.

- Haze Marijuana Seeds
- Quantity : 10 seeds
Type : Mostly Sativa
Climate : indoor
Yield : 425 gr/m2
Height : 70 - 80 cm
Flowering period : 10 - 14 weeks
Harvest : end of September
Stoned or High : Sativa high - Cereberal buzz
THC level : 15% - 20%
Grow Difficulty : Experienced




- Afghan Feminized Marijuana Seeds
- Quantity :10
Type : Mostly Indica
Climate : indoor / outdoor
Yield : 350 gr/m2
Height : 35 - 50 cm
Flowering period : 8-9 weeks
Harvest : begin october
Stoned or High : Stoned - indica body buzz
THC level : medium 10 - 15%
Grow Difficulty : Easy


How to grow marijuana.Dutch Seeds Growing Tutorial Part 9
What is the difference between male and female cannabis plants and hermaphrodites.The female cannabis plant from seeds from Amsterdam is very easy to recognize from her production of little white hairs. The first white hairs are found in the ‘armpits’ of the plant, where two of them spring from one pistil. The pistil is the place on the plant where the leaf is attached to the main stem and from where a side branch sprouts.
The male plant, by contrast, makes no white hairs and is therefore easy to tell from the female plant. The male plant has little balls that always appear in groups that hang off the plant by a thread. When these balls pop open after a lengthy period of blooming, then banana-shaped pieces become visible.
Out of these comes pollen that can fertilise your female plants. At the very beginning of blooming, the male balls and the female pistils look similar because they are only a millimetre or so big, but by looking carefully you will be able to see that a male ball grows away from the main stem, hangs on a thread and multiplies itself to form several balls.
A female pistil stays firmly close to the main stem until, at a particular moment once it is large enough, the two white hairs emerge. So if you see in one pistil two balls growing then the chance is already large that you are looking at a male specimen. In this way you can determine at quite an early stage of blooming which are the males and remove them to leave more room and resources for the females to develop.
Hermaphrodites are double-sexed plants, having both male and female characteristics. Within this sort we have various types. Some hermaphrodites are 90% male and 10% female, others are 90% female and 10% male, or 50% male female. In the case of those that are 90% female hermaphrodites, we can still simply remove the male flowers and in this way still develop harvestable, unfertilised - and therefore seedless - buds. The pollen these hermaphrodites produce will for the most part produce female seeds from amsterdam;)
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