HollyD
Well-Known Member
Well, technically we've already named her Sigmund, but I'd like to know more.
I got a clone from a friend and he isn't sure what the heck it is, and apparently can't ask the guy he got it from. It's short and squat with fat leaves, so, yeah, indica, but has anyone seen anything similar who might be able to nail it down a little further?
When we got the little clone it was almost dead from being in an over-hot greenhouse. It bounced back and all the lower leaves got HUGE. The biggest leaflets were literally two inches wide. Almost all of the leaves have three leaflets. Those giant leaves are gone and the newer ones are more like normal size, but still three leaflets on most of them.
You can see the purple color the leaves are turning. My friend's clone from the same plant is doing the same thing. What you can't see is that the plant smells like coffee. Like I thought my wife had put coffee grounds in the soil for some reason.
Location is Oregon, USA, if that matters.
Any ideas? I'm hoping my friend might recognize the name of a strain if there are any likely candidates.
I got a clone from a friend and he isn't sure what the heck it is, and apparently can't ask the guy he got it from. It's short and squat with fat leaves, so, yeah, indica, but has anyone seen anything similar who might be able to nail it down a little further?
When we got the little clone it was almost dead from being in an over-hot greenhouse. It bounced back and all the lower leaves got HUGE. The biggest leaflets were literally two inches wide. Almost all of the leaves have three leaflets. Those giant leaves are gone and the newer ones are more like normal size, but still three leaflets on most of them.
You can see the purple color the leaves are turning. My friend's clone from the same plant is doing the same thing. What you can't see is that the plant smells like coffee. Like I thought my wife had put coffee grounds in the soil for some reason.
Location is Oregon, USA, if that matters.
Any ideas? I'm hoping my friend might recognize the name of a strain if there are any likely candidates.
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