~Hey Slaythe, i think this thread is more or less over as far as i have to tell about my initial point, which was just one (the "ibl can't be f-anything") Ghead needed a whole weekend to think about it and correct that part ...but unfortunately he made some other mistakes during this process... so i had to explain and explain till he started with the idiot & dumbass attacks (which reminds of a child in a lo0sy situationSlaythe said:I think we lost XyZ.
Grat3fulh3ad said:lol, Xyz, you really are a dumbass, eh... If a line is not homozygous for most traits, then it is not an inbred line... A line that is only stable for one or two traits is not an inbred line... It may be a line that has been inbred, but if it doesn't breed true then it is not an ibl. True for one or two traits is NOT true breeding... lmao... This is the problem, I think... you have no understanding of what really constitutes an true breeding line. If the line does not breed true it is not an IBL, Get it?? Just because some inbreeding has taken place does not mean that there is an inbred ine... If it won't breed true, then where's the line, eh? you just have a semi-stable F'whatever generation' hybrid, not an IBL. Get an education and stop using the same idiotic 'sour milk' phrase... Feel free to play student here on the forums and in the rest of life... you've OBVIOUSLY got alot to learn, though your head may be to thick for reason to creep in.
Hint... documenting your position, and backing yourself up with sources would give you a bit more credibility... but when I've got the academic and scientific communities to support my side of the argument, and all you have is the phrase 'sour milk' and an imagination of how things should work... Hmmmmm....
From this post it's 0bvious that he never inbred a line... he is just confusing him-self (and maybe some others "newbs" on this subject ) with points that should be clear and not a matter of discussion. also, he is so much talkin'about corn and mathematical theory, while my posts are based on practical cannabis examples (ie. skunk, deep chunk, blueberry...) He is talkin like a every ibl should be similar like "clones-in-seed" and that's an indication that his practice is limited as far as making an ibl.
my berry (F5) is much similar to the original blueberry (F4), which means that this line is well-stabilized for most traits already at F4... they all give dense flowers with the fine berry flavor, medium-stretch, strong but hollow stems, similar flowering period (with a 1 week harvest window), purple/blue colors...etc... but of course you get some phenotypic difference - some plants are producing a bit deeper purple on the leaves, others on the calyxes. some have medium and some large calyxes... some plants give a regular bud structure while others tend to make a few foxtails at the end.... but the overall expression is much the same and the smoke is relatively equal in the finished product.
same with the skunk... it's a very true-breeding ibl, this doesn't mean that all plants are the same though. in fact, a difference can be noticed already on a smal scale; about 1 from 15 skunk females will be a bit different in the smell/taste (more fruity rather than skunky) but they all still share most of the traits where Sam was working on (high yield with short flowering and more sativa effects Also the deep chunk (a pure afghani-line, never hybridized) is showing some diversity in late flowering, some are more resinous and more deep flavorful than others ...and that's how nature works... inbreeding will generally increase homozygousity but you can never get 2 seeds that will be absolutely identical in the genetic structure. total uniformity (as far as human perception is possible) in the plant phenotype, will be only if crossing 2 unrelated lines, which are more or less homozygous for all traits (ie. pure-lines). when starting the inbreeding of a true F1 hybrid, than the genetic engine will never stop... and it's not possible to create a totally-stable line at F4 ...but anyway you can get a very nice and well-stable line with just little difference beetwen the plants... if lucky, already the F3 can appear much stable if chosing the right parent combination (finding the "right" parents is an other story - this is where all the art of selection actually comes into the game
i don't care for rez and his doggy words ...why should i care for a late milkman who brings nothing but sour~milk?
*some shots to make the thread more colorful :wink:
...original blueberry that was grown under the sun
& some macros from my "berry-ibl" (bbF5)
lot's of more pics in my gallery (also deep chunk, skunk/chunk and some blue crosses, among others...have fun
happy growing folk ...and to quote the old words from esbe... ~spread the good beans!
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