I've kept this a little secret till now.
But when I created my original RSC Kerala seeds in 2009. I intentionally used one of the
Kerala females for a special experiment. After she showed signs of being pollinated by the
Kerala males but still had white pistils left. I put her where I was keeping the male Highland
Thai pollen producing cuttings and exposed her to some Highland Thai pollen on purpose.
She was the only one that got both types of pollen. I didn't get too many seeds from her
because she was flowered in a 16 OZ cup and I pollinated them too early back then.
Anyways, I try to germinate a few of these Kerala X Highland Thai surprise seeds to see
what would grow. I got one to germinate and as you can all imagine it may be pure Kerala
or hybrid with a Highland Thai. All I can tell you this plant that I have now pictured below is
no pure Kerala. It's going for the sky like Highland Thai. So it must be a hybrid since the
seed came off a Kerala female and not branching like the Kerala. Genetic testing would be
the only way for sure to tell what's going on. But that's out of the question for me now.
But even in this tiny 4 inch pot it's going to the sky. I don't think I will be able to control
this single Highland Thai X Kerala hybrid beast like her pure Kerala cousins that I'm growing
now. It will probably take me forever to find out it's sex as well also I bet. Pure Thai plants
are notorious for taking forever to determine sex.
It's 11 1/2 " tall in a 4" pot now and beside the maturing Kerala in the last pic below
it's very visible from a distance by it's lime green leaves. The Kerala isn't dark green
BTW. It's just that the Highland Thai is very pale and I guess this hybrid of both types
of Sativa plants displays this phenotype as well.
Go figure the Highland Thai would be dominant. The damn things can become trees.
I will have to use this for breeding no matter what. Like how many people out there could have such a plant?
It's the only one in existence that I know of.
But when I created my original RSC Kerala seeds in 2009. I intentionally used one of the
Kerala females for a special experiment. After she showed signs of being pollinated by the
Kerala males but still had white pistils left. I put her where I was keeping the male Highland
Thai pollen producing cuttings and exposed her to some Highland Thai pollen on purpose.
She was the only one that got both types of pollen. I didn't get too many seeds from her
because she was flowered in a 16 OZ cup and I pollinated them too early back then.
Anyways, I try to germinate a few of these Kerala X Highland Thai surprise seeds to see
what would grow. I got one to germinate and as you can all imagine it may be pure Kerala
or hybrid with a Highland Thai. All I can tell you this plant that I have now pictured below is
no pure Kerala. It's going for the sky like Highland Thai. So it must be a hybrid since the
seed came off a Kerala female and not branching like the Kerala. Genetic testing would be
the only way for sure to tell what's going on. But that's out of the question for me now.
But even in this tiny 4 inch pot it's going to the sky. I don't think I will be able to control
this single Highland Thai X Kerala hybrid beast like her pure Kerala cousins that I'm growing
now. It will probably take me forever to find out it's sex as well also I bet. Pure Thai plants
are notorious for taking forever to determine sex.
It's 11 1/2 " tall in a 4" pot now and beside the maturing Kerala in the last pic below
it's very visible from a distance by it's lime green leaves. The Kerala isn't dark green
BTW. It's just that the Highland Thai is very pale and I guess this hybrid of both types
of Sativa plants displays this phenotype as well.
Go figure the Highland Thai would be dominant. The damn things can become trees.
I will have to use this for breeding no matter what. Like how many people out there could have such a plant?
It's the only one in existence that I know of.