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OUTDOOR GROWS 2023 -ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE-

pipeline

Cannabotanist
ICMag Donor
Veteran
My trifoliate male is now outdoors.

First time I've ever seen a 1 inch stalk in a 5 gallon bucket.

THE SEEDS HE MADE SPROUTED.

That might mean it's trifoliate but not triploidal ?

I read that some triploidal males have the wrong genes and can't make viable seeds.
Lets see it! Must be a strong plant! Triploid would mean an extra set of chromosomes and they are usually infertile from what I remember. Trifoliate just means with 3 leaflets per leaf, or 3 branches per node.
 

pipeline

Cannabotanist
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Hey everyone,
A couple more randoms of the Royal Jager for, dog of the week, Bonnie who looks like she could do with a set of dreds with those tell tail squinty eyes. View attachment 18847115 View attachment 18847114 Cheers,
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Looks like a heavy hitter indica! Plant is getting close to harvest time! How did your overwatering stress testing go? I guess we will truely know next season when you grow out the seeds! Thanks for sharing!

Please send more harvest pics, its good motivation! :smoke:
 

Eltitoguay

Well-known member

-"Ahhh... La "Cookie"... Que hacendosa y trabajadora es la "Cookie"... El video se corta antes de que le cabe un hoyo en la tierra por cada maceta a su patrón...
...Y que guapa es..., y con que gracia y donaire sensual se mueve...
Ahhh...,la "Cookie"... Hay que ver como me altero cada vez que veo a la "Cookie"...-"
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flower~power

~Star~Crash~
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Ahhh... La "Cookies"... Que hacendosa y trabajadora es la "Cookies"... El video se corta antes de que le cabe un hoyo en la tierra por cada maceta a su patrón...
...Y que guapa es..., y con que gracia y donaire sensual se mueve...
Ahhh...,la "Cookies"... Hay que ver como me altero cada vez que veo a la "Cookies"...
View attachment 18850025
^^^That is a handsome animal
 

pipeline

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ICMag Donor
Veteran
New views-- Will take it in bite sizes there are a couple other groups of plants to see up close. :smoke:

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Sativa Candy Chunk
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Sativa Candy Chunk
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Sativa Candy Chunk
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Other Varieties overview
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Sativa Candy Chunk except at top of photo

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Sativa Candy Chunk except at top

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Deep Chunk x Blueberry

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Pine Tar Kush

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Deep Chunk x Las Vegas Purple Kush x Hindu Kush-- Very course serrations on leaf margin


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Sativa Candy Chunk

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Its neat to see the different phenotypes showing up. Even If I don't get the tags exactly right at the beginning, I can obviously see who is who on a couple of them. Will do better next year and will make sure to bring extra tags at planting. Every plant needs a tag. Its tough at drying stage though, to keep them separated. Will be some training this year.

How do you guys keep the strains separated at planting and harvest? Any tips or tricks you could share?

Don't forget tags!

The tag is the smell of the resin at harvest. I usually have no need for tags. :smoke:


Thanks! :smoke:
 

pipeline

Cannabotanist
ICMag Donor
Veteran
East sky at the garden
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Here is the actual one with larger serrations on the leaf margin.

Deep Chunk x Las Vegas Purple Kush x Hindu Kush

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Paradise Cheese x Hindu Kush

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Paradise Cheese x Hindu Kush

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Early Skunk x Lebanese

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Early Skunk x Lebanese

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Sterling Skunk

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Uzbekistani IBL :smoke: :smoke:

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Get your taste buds ready! Looks like they're getting some momentum!

I have pruned back the trees selectively to still allow for a visual screen. Gets plenty of sun for the indicas, but a couple of the @shiva82 sativas are getting a bit stretchy, but they will see the sun once they get to a certain height.

The Deep Chunk and other indicas are much better adapeted for the shade. Tom Hill talked about how well they produced under shade. The are staying pretty short and seem content. :smoke:
 

pipeline

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Veteran
Landrace from the Philipines has traditionally been grown in patches in the mountains.

May be a good one to try for those people who can grow a 14-17 week flowering plant. :smoke:

Wonder if the Kibungen would do well in low light in the woods? Sativas tend to get a little stretchy, but it says they grow in the mountains, must be somewhat adapted!

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Tropical Sativa From The Mountains Of Northern Philippines

Highland tropical sativa with a unique fruity aromatic profile. Originating from a remote and mountainous area of northern Philippines, the Filipino Kibungan is easy to grow and extremely mold resistant.
Vigorous and easy to grow, this rare Filipino cultivar comes from a remote and sparsely populated mountain area. Local farmers typically grow small guerrilla patches in secluded locations up in the mountains. Most plants produce a delicious fruity scent reminiscent of a sweet and creamy tropical fruit. However some phenotypes tend to also be hazy and woody.
Many plants produce greasy stems with a distinct fruity smell. As they start flowering, the buds have a sweet fragrance at first which slowly becomes more complex. It then turns into a rich blend of sweet tropical fruit and spices.
The taste is often more woody and spicy though the fruitiness is still present on the exhale.
The Filipino Kibungan is without a doubt an uplifting strain. This fast hitter encourages creativity with its clean and joyful high. However, if harvested late, the effect can be more balanced thus producing a relaxing sensation.

Growth Pattern

This Kibungan cultivar grows insanely fast. It shows a lot of lateral branching.
Once the plants really start blooming however, they focus their energy on the tops and can produce some long Sativa spears.
Because of the abundant rainfalls almost throughout the year, this cultivar has developed the ability to withstand extreme humidity.
Its airy buds let the air flow through them and almost never mold.
Although the buds can be wispy, some plants produce big long and heavy colas.
In addition to that, it is also quite cold resistant for a tropical Sativa.
As is the case with most tropical sativas, the Filipino Kibungan can thrive in a poor soil. However, unlike most Sativas, it can also tolerate more fertile soils.
This cultivar is therefore more forgiving and more beginner friendly than most tropical varieties.

Preservation

In the Philippines, cannabis cultivation is still punishable by life imprisonment which causes local farmers to be extremely cautious. Therefore, sourcing seeds from that region is very difficult. The war on cannabis along with the introduction of foreign genetics have already made many Filipino landraces disappear. For these reasons, a local Filipino grower offered us these heirloom seeds for their reproduction and preservation. It allowed the Khalifa team to preserve this invaluable cultivar before the relentless eradication campaigns and pollen contamination caused it to go extinct.
This unique Filipino landrace is recommended to collectors, preservationists and breeders looking for an easy-to-grow Sativa with outstanding mold resistance and fruity terpenes.


View attachment 18850913
 

revegeta666

Not ICMag Donor
Thats awesome happy harvest! Looks like my Sativa Candy Chunk! A little different with those foxtails.

What are the terpenes like? Please let us know how it smokes. Any smoke test yet?

2022

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Sorry mate I missed the question. They smell like blonde hash, and a little fruity.

My little seedlings will stay inside for a week still before bringing them outdoors.
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Outdoors again? No, not you my friend, I think you had enough for today 😂
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Eltitoguay

Well-known member
...Well cousin @revegeta666; In the end, what I've done is jump over the wall from the patio of my house into the patio of my neighbor, Abundio, who is more myopic than Rompetechos, the one from the comics... With how blind he is and a bit of luck , he will only think that this year the garlic is giving him a bitch... A few hours ago, just:
View attachment 18845722 View attachment 18845723 View attachment 18845724 View attachment 18845725 View attachment 18845726 View attachment 18845727 View attachment 18845728 View attachment 18845729
Nice garden, Eltitoguay! The plants are kicking into gear, and your neighbor will never know. When do they start to flower where you are? Looks like some branchy indicas! What strains did you plant?
Seriously speaking, Pipeline, both the house, the patio and all the plants in the humble garden belong to my old friend "Capi".
"Capi" is a retired man, one of the few who farmed ganja in this rural and remote area of the country for as long as I can remember.
He no longer smokes; when he did, he preferred sativas: his sativas from when he smoked are the largest plants I've ever seen live, some of them being just over 5 and a half meters (just over 18 feet) tall.
Now he grows only for his independent sons and some thirty-somethings, who don't have a yard to grow because they live in apartment buildings, nor are they great cannabis connoisseurs either: without the 3 plants from their father's yard, they would have to buy on the black market. So my friend "Capi" grows them to ensure a harvest, the "typical commercial hybrids" with a relatively early/easy/abundant harvest, assured. Sometimes not just photoperiod; also large autos or "fast versions".
On this occasion, he germinated a Cristal Candy and a Red Hot Cookies from Sweet Seeds that I gave him as a gift, and a reproduction of Super Skunk from one of the innumerable national bulk seed banks that someone else gave to one of his children. The plants were born during the last week of March, and this is how they were this afternoon of today, during a visit to my friend:
PS: oh!! And "Capi" told me that the vegetable plants between the tomato plants and the marijuana plants, they are onions, and not garlic as I said, heh...:

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revegeta666

Not ICMag Donor
Sounds like Maple Leaf indica x Lebanese is a keeper then! How is the effect?
I vaped a couple of little budlets and the effect is nice and relaxing. I prefer to let them cure to let the effect settle though. I will let you know how I like them in a few weeks and if you ever want to give them a try you just gotta ask ;)
 

revegeta666

Not ICMag Donor
Is there a plant that attracts lady-bugs ?
Yes. Most flowering plants attract them but in my garden the ladybugs like to hang around the geraniums the most it seems. Also aromatic plants such as lavender, rosemary, mint, oregano, etc. But the best way to attract ladybugs is to have plants infested by aphids lol, as aphids are ladybug larvae's favourite meal. My oleanders and elder tree (in spanish adelfa and sauco, so not sure if google translated them well) are prone to aphids infestations. When the spring begins these usually get infested pretty early because the ants breed aphids on these plants to harvest the "honey" that comes out their asshole lol. Then by the end of spring I often see ladybugs more often around these plants, and have found they laid their eggs under the leaves.

Ladybugs are not as reliable as other predators such as lone wasps and bees. They are very delicate and if the conditions in your garden aren't to their liking they will easily fly away. Introducing ladybugs in your garden is a crapshoot because they have no problem going to live somewhere else, while the other predators I named, make their homes next to the flowering platns and will stay in the whereabouts for their whole cycle.
 

pipeline

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Veteran
Thanks River Rooster! Its a nice spot to grow in the woods. Since the sun comes up more in the southeast, the trees don't block very much, and the garden gets good morning light!

Morning sun need to be a priority for sure, need to dry down the foliage and flowers as soon as possible to prevent disease and mold, and it helps warm the garden up and get the plants growing in the morning.

Not really room for a water catching system, and have to make it as stealth as possible. Creek isn't too far, but as long as I can get the truck back there, will be able to haul water pretty close with the truck! Need to put down mulch for water conservation though, would really help keep the moisture from evaporating and also helps water to enter the soil better.

Had a little rain yesterday morning, I thought I would stop by and inspect to make sure they were all standing. Everything was up and looking great, it was a brief rain and was mostly light rain. One of the sterling skunks has been struggling to stand, so propped that one up. Always good to have the dogs check for pests and lay down new scent after rain. Thats when the animals tend to come out and mess with the garden the most.

Saw my pet frog again, but he isn't digging anymore, thankfully! :smoke:

Watering is paying off and the plants are beginning to pop! Here read these leaves, look how fat they're getting! Must be growing a good root system down there! :smoke:


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Deep Chunk x Blueberry

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Sativa Candy Chunk

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Pine Tar Kush

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Early Skunk x Lebanese

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Early Skunk x Lebanese

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Plot is moving along well! :smoke: :smoke:

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Cool, sounds like a winner indica hybrid, revegetta! Yeah the effect is more pronounced and distinguished after it has some time to dry slowly and cure out a bit.

Early Skunk x Lebanese is looking like a good hybrid. :smoke:
 

pipeline

Cannabotanist
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Yeah sure is. I think he said his lebanese was 9-11 weeks. I am kind of confused, because Farmerlion said it was auto or semi auto.
 

revegeta666

Not ICMag Donor
Yeah sure is. I think he said his lebanese was 9-11 weeks. I am kind of confused, because Farmerlion said it was auto or semi auto.
Ace's Lebanese they call semi auto because they are very eager to flower and they may start flowering as soon as the roots fill their pot. Yours are in the ground so I wouldn't worry about unwanted flowering. But they should start sooner than most.
 

pipeline

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ICMag Donor
Veteran
Yeah thanks, he said they are aces and it is semi auto like you said. Cool so should see stacking maybe in july vs early august. Sounds good to me! :smoke:
 

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