Schwaggy P's Random Stuff

Schwaggy P

Well-Known Member
Hells Angels OG
haogstructure.jpg
All the things you love about OG structure:
  • Longer internodes / open frame
  • Lower branches join in regardless of topping
  • Solid stretch
Soil HAOG mother: She responds well to LST and topping, throwing tops/cuts for days.
haogstructuresoil.jpg

HAOG varying leaf blade count. Earlier developing fans start with 3 blades and increase to 5 as the particular branch is allowed to develop. You can see many 3-blade leaves on the mother plant since it is constantly adding new growth after cuts are taken. Conversely, the hydro cut (picA) that was allowed to grow unmolested, has developed sets of 5-blade leaves.
haogblades.jpg
:!: Note: The lighting in these pictures creates a shadow that may look like double serration, but there are none.

HAOG soil mother plant branch mature enough to develop more blades.
haogfaincountB.jpg
 

Baja.Beaches

Well-Known Member
Tabletop tumbler - turn your trim into gold, set it and forget it (kind of ;-))
That looks like a fun tool. How clean is the kif out of it? What micron screen? Looks small and manageable, what is the brand?

An acquaintance bought one of the high end pollen extractors, huge, expensive & high tech looking but the kif he brought over had a lot of plant matter in it when viewed under a microscope. Course much of that could well be his methods, he is pretty cocky, but what I saw required more cleaning. Being lazy I like the idea a lot.

You sure have a lot going on. Do you press the pollen?
 

Schwaggy P

Well-Known Member
That looks like a fun tool. How clean is the kif out of it? What micron screen? Looks small and manageable, what is the brand?

An acquaintance bought one of the high end pollen extractors, huge, expensive & high tech looking but the kif he brought over had a lot of plant matter in it when viewed under a microscope. Course much of that could well be his methods, he is pretty cocky, but what I saw required more cleaning. Being lazy I like the idea a lot.

You sure have a lot going on. Do you press the pollen?
It is definitely much easier than hand shaking the trim. There are two screens, 150 and 180. It produces decently clean sift. Your approach with it can help or hurt, (freezing the trim can help
separate more cleanly while adding some marbles with super dry trim can increase plant matter
). I mainly use it to coat cones and top off bowls.
WLxGT(boomstick).jpg
The Pollen Extractor can be found here: https://www.pollenextractor.com/pollen-extractors/index.html
 

Schwaggy P

Well-Known Member
@Schwaggy P which screen did you select 180 or 150? How much material does that tumbler hold comfortably?
I got the two-pack combo that came with two tumblers and one each 150 and 180. The capacity depends on the material going in, I usually just use it for sugarleaf trim that I roughly crush in a ziploc before loading it in. Threw together a quick batch and weighed it out; it was roughly 40g.
trimtumbler.jpg
I've found that keeping it 50-60% full allows for good movement as it spins. You can always crush it more and get more in the same space, but I'm in no hurry to work through the trim. A couple marbles helps move things along.

I let it tumble about 45-60 minutes before using a toothbrush to clean off anything still on the screen. Every successive round of tumbling will introduce more plant matter, so if you prefer cleaner product, stick to 2 rounds per load.
 

Schwaggy P

Well-Known Member
Comparison between Chem D leaf traits and Useful's Chem D x Banana Kush leaf traits. These characteristics have been observed in 3 phenos of the Chem D x Banana Kush. They seem sporadic and do not affect all leaves.
chemd vs. cdbk.jpg
The three corollary traits are:
  • Variegation
  • Leaf deformation occurring with (but not necessarily always in conjunction with) instances of variegation
  • Double serration
 
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