What are you toking on?

ProfessorPotSnob

New Member
Smoking on Kak the Tripper this morning , the genetics are almost the same as Jack The Ripper but slighty different due to Plush being in the mothers mix , I made this one in my spare room and its a keeper .. One hell of a powerhouse yielding haze and this was just a seedling , aging the cut now and seeing how it does after 6 months compared to the initial seed test shown .. PotSnob


P3025258.jpgP3025255.jpg
 

djwimbo

Well-Known Member
Acquired some Kandy Kush last night, dude had to break a 8g cola in half to give me one dense as hell 4g nug. I don't remember the name of the main batch I'm burning through right now, but I'm about to bust that Kandy out.

Where do you guys host pics? I don't want green pics all through my photobucket.
 

fattiemcnuggins

Well-Known Member
Smoking on Kak the Tripper this morning , the genetics are almost the same as Jack The Ripper but slighty different due to Plush being in the mothers mix , I made this one in my spare room and its a keeper .. One hell of a powerhouse yielding haze and this was just a seedling , aging the cut now and seeing how it does after 6 months compared to the initial seed test shown .. PotSnob


View attachment 2604856View attachment 2604857
anyone else have an opinion on this? I think there may be something to it. Thai from seed was good last time...looks great this time and more smell.
 

Medical420MI

Active Member
I can't decide between gsc and sour d. Cleaning the oil rig so I can do clean dabs of the spacedawg and wizard wax I picked up yesterday.
 

ProfessorPotSnob

New Member
anyone else have an opinion on this? I think there may be something to it. Thai from seed was good last time...looks great this time and more smell.
My Thaighani is very different but I can see where one might mistake it with the Tripper, but I can ensure you that they are separate cuts that I created and have smoked and shared with a few others here ;) ..

I have the Thaighani back in bloom for round two and this was the seedling below that I kept and cut . I age everything though that has sativa genetics to ensure it has expressed its true potential before final decisions .. I ll post them both for ya to see when they have aged and went another round as you ll notice they are distinctly different in many ways structuraly being very different in genetics and appearance .

P2185200.jpg
 

fattiemcnuggins

Well-Known Member
Sorry my post was slightly confusing but you still covered what I had mentioned LOL. I meant the thai I ran last time from seed was good, but now that is has been about six months and I am flowering it again, I am seeing a big difference in tightness of nodes as well as more smell. Not something I had seen myself before but I think there's something to it.
 

Medical420MI

Active Member
Decided to go big this morning. Packed a bowl of blue mist with some pressed kief hash AND a few nice chunks of skydog wax!
 

ProfessorPotSnob

New Member
Sorry my post was slightly confusing but you still covered what I had mentioned LOL. I meant the thai I ran last time from seed was good, but now that is has been about six months and I am flowering it again, I am seeing a big difference in tightness of nodes as well as more smell. Not something I had seen myself before but I think there's something to it.
Right on bro , its kick ass to open up Sativa genetics to there fullest potential verses seed runs .. Sometimes though it works the opposite and not in ones favor .. Seen some nice young stable plants turn unstable after months as well .. So it pays off when aging them no matter :)
 

buckaroo bonzai

Well-Known Member
Right on bro , its kick ass to open up Sativa genetics to there fullest potential verses seed runs .. Sometimes though it works the opposite and not in ones favor .. Seen some nice young stable plants turn unstable after months as well .. So it pays off when aging them no matter :)

my patient friend I help just got done with a sativa run of pineappleXcin99Xshanti shiva....

we flowered for 4mons!
these were cuts too..:leaf:.nt beans

sometimes it takes aLong time to bring out the optimal effects of some of these sativas

fuk is that meDiciNe stRonG anD guD!!:eyesmoke:
 

potsnoberry

Active Member
Sorry my post was slightly confusing but you still covered what I had mentioned LOL. I meant the thai I ran last time from seed was good, but now that is has been about six months and I am flowering it again, I am seeing a big difference in tightness of nodes as well as more smell. Not something I had seen myself before but I think there's something to it.
I very rarely see people letting seed plants veg long enough to reach full sexual maturity before flowering the plant for the first time. (a good indicator is to wait until the seed plant displays alternate phyllotaxy) So, most growers don't see the full and actual potential of their plant until the second or third run, and in many cases end up disposing of fine genetics because of impatience in the initial search. Plants that are fully mature at flowering inception are happier, produce better, smell better and are completely intoxicating.
 

Bigtacofarmer

Well-Known Member
I always veg at least 2 months. And unless it completely sucks I will usually run every plant at least twice, just to make sure I don't kill the "one". Flipping to soon can also cause hermies. I used to try to rush things now and then and have seen huge balls on the bottom of buds, and not on the clone that got proper veg.
 

potsnoberry

Active Member
Some believe a plant is ready as soon as it can be sexed, but it is much more complex than just that. Full sexual maturity requires a hormonal wash to flush down from the apical tip to truly activate all the growing tips. This is a critical reason not to top first runs, you really want to maintain that "xmas tree" pyramidal shape with a dominant, controlling apical tip. This is the only way to judge a plants full potential. Once the whole plant has been "activated" by the central brain you will see a faster and fuller flower instigation, so some of the time invested in fully maturing a plant is recouped later.
 
Top