
047: The Final Push: Dialing in the Last Weeks of Flower
Cultivation Elevated - Indoor Farming, Cannabis Growers & Cultivators - Pipp Horticulture
Episode · 0 Play
Episode · 41:38 · Dec 3, 2025
About
Subscribe & Watch on Youtube Cultivation Elevated – The Final Push: Dialing in the Last Weeks of FlowerHosts: Michael Williamson & Anders PetersonPresented by: Pipp HorticultureFocus: The science and strategy behind the final 2–3 weeks of flower — managing senescence and finishing techniques to maximize chemical quality, aroma, terpene retention, coloration, and smooth burn. Listen to learn:What senescence actually is — and why guiding it matters more than forcing itHow to taper environmental cues (light, temp, RH, VPD, CO₂) without shocking the cropWhy extreme “flushing” or 48-hour dark periods are outdatedHow color expression works and when anthocyanins are worth chasingThe right way to manage root zone EC during the finishHow airflow, canopy thinning, and uniformity protect quality and drying consistencyWhy trichomes should drive your harvest timingData to track each harvest to refine finishing cycles over time⏱ Episode BreakdownIntro: Understanding Senescence0:00–4:20• Senescence = the plant’s genetically programmed aging and biochemical refinement phase• Peaks in cannabinoid + terpene development• Outdoors, shortening days and cooler nights drive senescence• Senescence isn’t the plant dying — it’s perfecting what it has builtWhy Finishing Matters & Common Late-Stage Mistakes4:20–7:15• Growers often stack stressors late (pruning + EC shift + temp change at once)• Many facilities harvest too early due to tight scheduling• Early cutting reduces terpene, potency, and maturity• Final weeks are about refinement, not heavy interventionDefining a Finished Flower: Trichomes, Pistils & Visual Cues7:15–11:55• Trichome progression: clear → milky → amber• Ideal target: mostly milky, some amber• Excess new white pistils signal incomplete maturity• Fan leaf fade = carbohydrates relocating to resin glands• Avoid sending any late “reveg” signalsEnvironmental Tapering: Light, CO₂, Temperature, Humidity, VPD11:55–17:06• Reduce DLI by 10–25% to avoid photo-oxidative stress• Taper CO₂ from 1200–1400 ppm down to ~650 ppm pre-harvest• Lower temps 3–5°F in final week• Maintain 50–55% RH; avoid deep swings• Allow modest VPD rise without overdrying• Cooler late-stage temps help retain volatile terpenesColor, Anthocyanins & Phenotypic Plasticity17:06–20:28• Color = genetics + environment• Anthocyanins are temp-sensitive and highly plastic• Some cultivars purple even in warm rooms; others resist• Extreme cold to force color can reduce yield and slow photosynthesisThe 48-Hour Dark Period Myth20:28–21:54• No evidence darkness increases THC• Benefits come from reduced temperature, not lack of light• Better: taper light + temp rather than shutting lights off entirelyDrying-on-the-Vine Strategy21:54–23:54• Reduce or pause irrigation 12–48 hours before harvest• Helps start internal drying if dry rooms are undersized• Avoid wilting; maintain some light for transpirationRoot-Zone & Nutrient Strategy: The Flushing Debate23:54–29:32• Full RO flushes cause osmotic shock and reduce yield• Modern method: gradual EC
41m 38s · Dec 3, 2025
© 2025 Captivate Audio Ltd. (OG)