Nice selection!Here are some pictures of different seed samples from IPK Gatersleben of Slovakia,Argentina,North Korea, Georgia and China https://www.icmag.com/ic/picture.php?albumid=54457&pictureid=1270811View Image https://www.icmag.com/ic/picture.php?albumid=54457&pictureid=1270819View Image
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Nice selection!
Did you send the material transfer agreement by post or does it also work in electronic form? [/FONT] [/FONT]
Thanks!Thanks Only Ornamental,
Indeed the material transfer agreement works the digital way. If I remember correctly you only have to hit the "accept" button. The ordering itself also works in an easy step-by-step way.
The IPK Gatersleben has really quite an interesting collection of Cannabis accessions and also many different other crop samples from around the world.
Moreover I would like to point out that they also seem to have accessions of what I would consider more of an " indica " or Broad Leaf Drug (BLD) variety rather than a Narrow Leaf Hemp (NLH) variety.
They classify them in their system as Cannabis sp. and not like the rest as Cannabis sativa or Cannabis sativa subsp. sativa.
These samples are from Turkey (CAN 64 and CAN 47 ) and Syria
( CAN 57 ).
http://gbis.ipk-gatersleben.de/GBIS...Dn5Q!-549215130!1405605994919?autoScroll=0,13
But I also might be totally wrong with this assumption.
At least these countrys are or were know to produce hashish,
but you can produce hashish with every Cannabis variety which produce enough trichomes/Cannabinoides inside these to be valuable.
Grew the syrian variety a couple of years ago but had to remove it due space problems. They looked quite distinct in leave shape
( pretty serrated ) and were also quite branchy, hence the space problems.
Also grew the Argentinian variety and it delivered pink pistils and and big calyxes with an overall branchy and not to tall structure , therefore I would assume it is a strain used for both fibre and seeds.
Hope it helps
Az
Or to Slovakia (see PM) .The largest seed food varieties I've seen were Chinese. The Europeans might have the fiber market cornered but I think we should be looking to China for developing our own seed varieties.