ICGA
Active member
lol making a leaf variegated shouldnt have a direct effect on the budding sites, and nutrient stress will slow metabolic process lowering resin production. It was not bred in an organic grow room and is probably to homozygous to adapt well to environments (including nutrient absorption) that it wasnt selected for as its pretty much for sure an s1 bag seed. It probably only likes force feeding in DWC style situations. If you grow the plants in the environment they were selected in they should more closely resemble the phenotype your looking for. Also chem is pretty fast flowering to be progeny of nevils have, but both chem and nevils haze for sure have northern lights in them.The variegation comes with elevated calcium and potassium. Youre looking at unmetabolized calcium in the presence of potassium, blocking the movement of boron, which will shift the fatty acid profile of the plant.
Chem vocs are aliphatic (derived from fats). Cannabinoids are aliphatic. So what is Chem D? The boron deficient pheno? Intentional? Or a boron hungry pheno with an affinity for fatty acid production? All these photos of variegation are unintentional? Am I supposed to withhold boron to get the Chem D flavor or not? Would Chem D smell like Chem X Y or Z when grown without calcium-potassium injury?
Who knows. Maybe in 20 years Monsanto will tell us what Chem D actually is, since the grower and smoker communitys can't standardize a set of traits for something which is nothing but distinct traits that need standardized.
Youll never see variegation in Chem D with proper boron ratios. That's a fact. Why is it so hard to get an answer on whether that's the goal or not, to shift fatty acid profile in the plant?
Does Boron deficiency make bud more dank? Is that what I'm missing?
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