Yes mostly, read through the posts. You'll find the killer mom was used to produce the seed. I'm sure dubi can confirm this.Is Malawi Gold the same as the killer Malawi that you sell here?
Painfull
Hi dubi...I have seen Malawi Gold advertised by other breeders just wondering if there was any difference in the regular and the gold. Said to have a gold color. and seems to come up in talks when pot growers talk about African strains. Just was puzzled if there was two different strains.
Pain
Maybe its gold from the conditions and drying processes in africa?.
I dont think there is such a thing of 'regular' malawi, im pretty sure there is 6 phenotypes according to franco from GHS(who also mentioned a killer pheno).
I think ace malawi is a mix of different malawi's bred and refined to be more 'grower friendly' with height,flowering etc but i doubt there is a malawi that produces gold flowers naturally, i could be wrong though.
cheers.
There's an old trick to getting the gold color - get a knife out toward the last few weeks before harvest and score a ring around the main stem / trunk of the plant. The damage will cause the plant to yellow and viola - Malawi Gold.
Does it add anything? Probably not, you're basically torturing the plant pre-harvest and I believe that healthy plants produce the best buds - but I've read quite a few old stoner threads and they all have similar stories. A while back, a friend's plant saw some rodent damage to the stem and it developed a similar "gold" effect.
fHi Painfull,
Sorry but im not sure about the meaning of your question.
Our Malawi line matures with a more silverish color, due the very high resin content at the end of flowering, especially when is grown indoors. If by 'Gold' you mean high quality, then i would say yes, it's a high quality sativa line in terms of vigor, yield, resin production, potency and duration of the effect.
Some old imported sativa landraces were called 'Gold' due the yellowish color of their dried flowers, but this also depends a lot of the drying and curing process, a yellowish flower mainly means that the flower has lost the chlorophyll.
Thank you very much Adza for the quotes This is how the malawi was bred in seed form.