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Is my leaf close to mature enough?

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Idaho Mike

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406501B4-A8E8-42C7-B991-21A6C439B941.jpeg1D2AF181-500C-4FAE-8E02-B1F2360746C1.jpeg3414B5D3-9E4E-49B9-8E58-8E07DEBDA810.jpeg8D02A4FA-53A3-429A-A03A-C58D816CBF64.jpeg39CFCD7D-8D6E-409D-B62E-2FCD0B6C9559.jpegUp here in North Idaho we are getting into the rainy season. This test crop was planted a little late, and I’m worried the rain and cooler temps may affect the plant leaves ability to ripen. I’m wondering if I should wait, or begin picking some of the larger lower leaves. One plant has begun showing some color changes on a couple of leaves.
I’m new to growing. Any advice is welcome.
 

deluxestogie

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They all look fairly immature to me, from the photos. Rain and cool (not frost) may slow maturation some. But harvesting immature leaf is a futile endeavor. You can prime a leaf when the very tip shows some yellow--any yellow. You probably need another two or three weeks (frost-free) to see most of the plant maturing.

If a frost is predicted while you wait, harvest all the lower leaf, and just take your chances with its color-curing adequately. Frosted leaf turns out to be predictably horrid.

Bob

EDIT: The yellow in the 3rd/4th photo appears on leaf that is above leaf that has not matured, so I'm suspicious.
 

Charly

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The yellow in the 3rd/4th photo appears on leaf that is above leaf that has not matured, so I'm suspicious.

I agree, those leaves from the top are showing some discoloration (probably caused by a deficiency or a disease), they are not mature in my opinion.
Wait and if the weather becomes too cold you can try to stalk curing them in a freeze-free area.
 
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