onewarmguy
Well-Known Member
Do the THC/CBD components change when the trichomes turn from milky, to clear to amber? It strikes me that something has to be changing with the color. Does anybody know what it's doing?
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Snap! I just read part of an article about that very subject. I will look to find. It was titled something like "The chemical components of trichome development. It was a bridge to far for me to understand. I'll post if I can find it. So many clicks on an internet search. PHEW!Do the THC/CBD components change when the trichomes turn from milky, to clear to amber? It strikes me that something has to be changing with the color. Does anybody know what it's doing?
I want to chop some early. I am worried I will pull it before there is much effective THC.according to ed reosenthal science,, there are indeed chemical changes going on when trikes change colour
according to ed,, trikes have their most psychoactive properties when clear,, the turn to cloudy is actually degradation of the psychoactive properties of the trichome,, not into nothing mind you,, just compounds with less psychoactive properties
ed says cloudy is thc converting to cbn
amber is full on degraded
this is why i sometimes harvest early and i certainly will advise folks to harvest early if they are having severe issues nearing end of flower
try a test yourself, harvest a bud early,, i promise,, you will be surprised
some of it mentioned here The Cannabis Ripening Process: Steps, Stages & My TOP 12 Natural Bloom Enhancers — Ed Rosenthal
I want to chop some early. I am worried I will pull it before there is much effective THC.
How do you determine the harvest window for an early sample? If I see starting to change to milky I could harvest some?
I will do. I am laughing though. These flowers are huge. Bruce Banner takes her time to ripen and the flowers are so pretty. A rewarding grow, YES. I am loving just looking at these amazing flowers.I would suggest that when the bud looks a useable size, I would take a sample and put it aside,,
Note that some trichomes, the earlier ones,to form, turn milky real early,, so there is milky trikes on most if not all buds even half way to maturity
So it is the 'majority' of trikes we are looking at. If the majority of trikes is still clear, with some cloudy,, and probably some amber too,, then snip a tip friend
I could be wrong here as am I by no means a scientist nor have I looked to deeply into this subject but I think as the turn amber the THC degrades into CBN.You ask a great question. I don’t know if you’re going to find the answer, yet. As more and more states legalize cannabis the research should get better. What I’ve been able to find usually says clear trichromes and the thc is not well developed, milky trichromes and thc is at its highest level, little CBD. Amber and the thc is beginning to turn to CBD. That said, the CBD has a mellowing/calming effect on the thc high, not a bad thing. Now, I have never seen a scientific study or chemical analysis that proves any of it, there may be one (or more), but I can’t find them. For right now, I regard it as the conventional wisdom.
MAK1, I searched your hint and I've got to tell you a bridge to far is an understatment, I haven't had to slog through something like that since college and I hope I didn't misunderstand some of the terms, but for all three research papers I read, none of them deal with trichome color except in the spectrographic analyses they use to figure out what kind of cannabidiol it contains, which is not related to what we see. Now I need to fire up a bowl to try and get my brain to stop spinning, I'm just an old backyard grower, trying to figure out terms like "Fractionation of the epidermal tissue mixture was achieved by centrifugation of the discontinuous Percoll® density gradient at 400 g at 4 ⁰C for 10 min" makes me dizzy.Snap! I just read part of an article about that very subject. I will look to find. It was titled something like "The chemical components of trichome development. It was a bridge to far for me to understand. I'll post if I can find it. So many clicks on an internet search. PHEW!
If this is making you dizzy stop watching the centrifuge.MAK1, I searched your hint and I've got to tell you a bridge to far is an understatment, I haven't had to slog through something like that since college and I hope I didn't misunderstand some of the terms, but for all three research papers I read, none of them deal with trichome color except in the spectrographic analyses they use to figure out what kind of cannabidiol it contains, which is not related to what we see. Now I need to fire up a bowl to try and get my brain to stop spinning, I'm just an old backyard grower, trying to figure out terms like "Fractionation of the epidermal tissue mixture was achieved by centrifugation of the discontinuous Percoll® density gradient at 400 g at 4 ⁰C for 10 min" makes me dizzy.