Ladies and germs... This is my new favorite pot plant.
Chemdawg #4, big sister to Chemdawg D.
Why do I favor this plant over Chem D??? Let me count the ways...
Chem D is a heavy yielder, like #4, except that the D gets floppy branches that fall all over the place... Chem #4 holds its own weight and has a better growth profile, leading to less staking hassle and less chance of pests and disease.
Chem D has the TMV, which stands for Tobacco Mosaic Virus. At least that's what the rumor is. I know for sure that it has something, because the leaves are variegated (having white patches mixed in with the green in this case). Over the past few years the variegation has worsened... to the point now where the plants actually suffer from light poisoning much more easily. They've become sensitive. I'm sure some D cuts, kept in other places aren't as bad... but the ones in my grow circles are effected quite clearly. Chem #4 has no such problems.
Chem D STINKS... bad. Chem #4 is nothing close to the stink of the D. Stinky weed is great, but not usually worth the extra risk in a prohibitive society like ours. I'd rather give a friend a bag of Chem #4 to drive home with than a bag of Chem D to drive home with. One of the two is much more likely to get you busted. Chem #4 just smells a little lemony with a hint of skunk as an afterthought... Chem D smells like if ass had an ass.
Chem D yields very well, Chem #4 yields very well.
Chem D gets me very high, but (and here's my favorite part)... Chem #4 gets me WAstEd!!!! Yessah! Chem #4 gets me really, really high. I can always count on the 4 to do the job, completely. I have still not gained a tolerance to the high.
Now for some pictures. I intend to update over the last few weeks of her life.
She was grown 100% organically, in organic soil, fed with guanos. She received her last feeding two days ago... about a tablespoon of 1-10-1 bat guano, scratched into the soil surface and watered. We'll let her eat at that feeding for a while, and once she starts to yellow down (in another 2 weeks or so), I'll know the time is nigh.
Chemdawg #4, big sister to Chemdawg D.
Why do I favor this plant over Chem D??? Let me count the ways...
Chem D is a heavy yielder, like #4, except that the D gets floppy branches that fall all over the place... Chem #4 holds its own weight and has a better growth profile, leading to less staking hassle and less chance of pests and disease.
Chem D has the TMV, which stands for Tobacco Mosaic Virus. At least that's what the rumor is. I know for sure that it has something, because the leaves are variegated (having white patches mixed in with the green in this case). Over the past few years the variegation has worsened... to the point now where the plants actually suffer from light poisoning much more easily. They've become sensitive. I'm sure some D cuts, kept in other places aren't as bad... but the ones in my grow circles are effected quite clearly. Chem #4 has no such problems.
Chem D STINKS... bad. Chem #4 is nothing close to the stink of the D. Stinky weed is great, but not usually worth the extra risk in a prohibitive society like ours. I'd rather give a friend a bag of Chem #4 to drive home with than a bag of Chem D to drive home with. One of the two is much more likely to get you busted. Chem #4 just smells a little lemony with a hint of skunk as an afterthought... Chem D smells like if ass had an ass.
Chem D yields very well, Chem #4 yields very well.
Chem D gets me very high, but (and here's my favorite part)... Chem #4 gets me WAstEd!!!! Yessah! Chem #4 gets me really, really high. I can always count on the 4 to do the job, completely. I have still not gained a tolerance to the high.
Now for some pictures. I intend to update over the last few weeks of her life.
She was grown 100% organically, in organic soil, fed with guanos. She received her last feeding two days ago... about a tablespoon of 1-10-1 bat guano, scratched into the soil surface and watered. We'll let her eat at that feeding for a while, and once she starts to yellow down (in another 2 weeks or so), I'll know the time is nigh.