Hello Everyone,
The Crack Mack is picking up pace with the fade as she packs more weight onto her branches.


We can see what I mean in the photograph above. The foliage is starting to turn yellow and drop at an increased rate.
![]() | Crack Mack |
---|---|
![]() | Sativa |
![]() | MaxiBloom 5-15-14 |
![]() | Intense Fruity Aroma/Dank Undertone |
![]() | Green Crack/Big Mack Superstar |
![]() | Flowering |
![]() | 48 Days-FLOWER |
![]() | Photoperiod/Auto recessive |
![]() | Syracuse New York |
This is nothing to be concerned about, as it is a natural process of the buds using up the stored nutrients in the foliage for increased growth.


With lots of healthy perky pistils, she has a bit more plumping left to do for the remaining three weeks of flowering.














The Crack Mack comes from a lineage of good quality sativa dominant genetics and the quality of those genetics shines through this plant magnificently.
It took a combination of familiarity with the parent genetics and a couple grows of the Crack Mack to really get a feel for how this plant grows.
It is not an easy plant to grow indoors, because it requires a lot of patience to grow the sativa dominant Crack Mack to its fully mature size for optimal bud production in an indoor environment. Despite the fact that it is not an easy cannabis plant to grow indoors, it's a rewarding undertaking for the quality of the bud it produces.
That will do it for today's update.
How is the Crack Mack looking to all of you?
I would love to read your thoughts in the comment section!
Thank you for stopping by!
Have a good day! -@futuremind