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India tropical NLDs

musigny23

Well-known member
This is "Khasi Hills Meghalaya". Eastern India. Here is what I consider a classic India tropical narrowleaf plant. Again, just a few seeds started. And again a promising female with very reddish purple stems hermed as flowering started. It was very disappointing to see that. But it is the reality of these. After some years of growing unstable tropical landraces I've learned a lot about coping with it. There is no way to avoid some wasted effort on growing what becomes a herm after 4 or 5 months, but it is possible to not suffer unwanted pollination of other plants. First from any group of 5 or more seeds started, the first plants to show female at the normal time will most likely be stable. Later ones will be more likely to herm eventually. Then as flowering begins, inspect the top growing tip, EVERY day for signs of male flowers emerging. If you do that, you will catch it well in time to prevent any pollen dropping. But you must look carefully every day. If you want what these types have in terms of smell taste and effect, you pretty much must deal with that aspect of them.

This plant clearly has some weeks to go and so far so good. Interesting to see some color developing in in the flower tips. The scent is a sort of citrusy mango I guess. I'm not great at coming up with scent analogies. Given proper and favorable conditions this could be a high yielder of some beautiful colas. I haven't experienced the effects yet of course but I expect a classic cerebral elevating high. I really hope this gets to a good level of maturity. As this one is in a grow bag, I can move it back under the deck to give it some protection from a strong storm. Not perfect but potentially helpful if such a situation arose.

If you look closely in the third photo, you can see a sun leaf with a few brown spots. I assess that as a very mild case of septoria leaf spot. I've been pulling those when I see them to reduce spread. I never had it before and I think a soil amendment, compost product I brought in this year must have had it. It isn't the worst thing that could happen but undesirable all the same. Far less damaging than fusaria or botrytis but a nuisance. I'll now have to watch closely for it next year and treat it aggressively early and continuously. A bad case really can stunt a plants yield.


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Baba Karuna

Well-known member
This is "Pipalpader Odisha". Meaning seeds were collected from the area of Pipalpader village in Odisha state India. I tried just a few seeds to at least get an idea of it. I can't remember if I had two or three plants at the start. I think it was just two, and unfortunately, one that seemed female hermed. That left me this one. That one was growing with more branches and looking like a more classic tropical India narrowleaf. This one has a simpler pine tree structure with flowering concentrated mainly on the tips of the branches. The buds are dense and solid for a tropical but this has remained not just mold resistant but mold proof. It did catch a very mild case of a leaf spot fungus (my guess, septoria) on the sun leaves which mainly caused it to yellow and drop sun leaves a bit faster than it would have but the buds are fine.

A different sort of deep tropical fruit and citrus smell. This one is closing in on maturity. Still some white stigmas emerging and flower growth so I'm letting it go. It has survived some rain, winds and cold as well which I think may have weathered off some trichomes on the exposed surfaces but they are there inside the more protected parts. I did notice the emergence of a reminder of its sexual instability, do you see it?
You can also see how the cold nights and rain shriveled some of the new white stigmas on the very tip of the cola. We have some more light to moderate rain tomorrow and then some sunny warmer days later this week. Hope that get this one to a optimum point to harvest. This would be a reasonable sample of this type as far as smell taste and effect now but would benefit from a bit more time in reasonable weather conditions.
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Well done my friend 🙌🏼 I love the photos and your enthusiasm and I will definitely be watching this thread 😎

This season I focoused my Tropical Sativa efforts on Sub Saharan Africa 🇪🇹 🇸🇳 🇳🇬 and Peru 🇵🇪 But I am currently doing a seed increase on some Orissa Gold. This will be followed by an another seed increase for Kerala Gold, and then ideally I will do yet another increase for Sheelavathi. There was an Orissa Gold makes that was a bee 🐝 magnet 🧲. I have never seen bees flock to herb like they did with this type. The females also had bees on them and smelled crisp and refreshing, very floral and bright 🤩

Very cool to see your ladies thriving, I love the look of tropical trichomes 🥰 I pray your efforts continue to blossom and bear fruit 🙏🏼


🪷Om Ādhara Śaktaye Namah🪷
 
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