D.D.
Member
UPDATE:
The seeding was not a result of chemical application or stress.
It seems to be a survival trait for this strain. Grow the males out and they seed.
Actually the chemically treated males produced less seed than untreated ones.
I discovered this about 2 weeks ago when I chopped the last of my males.
(One lone male clone survives a a friends house - for future seed production)
Need to set things straight. These males self-reversed and produced seeds.
It had nothing to do with chemical applications or stress.
I believe it to be a survival trait.
This is the first time i ever allowed males to fully ripen , i always used them for pollen and chucked them in the past , so this might be a normal survival trait as far as i know.
still plan to grow the seed out next season for sentimental reasons , but i realize its time to move on to some new genetics.
The seeding was not a result of chemical application or stress.
It seems to be a survival trait for this strain. Grow the males out and they seed.
Actually the chemically treated males produced less seed than untreated ones.
I discovered this about 2 weeks ago when I chopped the last of my males.
(One lone male clone survives a a friends house - for future seed production)
Need to set things straight. These males self-reversed and produced seeds.
It had nothing to do with chemical applications or stress.
I believe it to be a survival trait.
This is the first time i ever allowed males to fully ripen , i always used them for pollen and chucked them in the past , so this might be a normal survival trait as far as i know.
still plan to grow the seed out next season for sentimental reasons , but i realize its time to move on to some new genetics.