For some reason I can't edit the above... but that's about a third of my cactus garden. Some are etiolated, so these ones I left in full sun trying to fatten them up a bit.
Thanks It’s fabulously stinks, and it’s extremely stacked with resinGod damn this looks amazing...
That’s the seedsmen original Haze plant has the ability to get ultra gigantic…And this one looks just like the ones we had that probably could have flowered for 9 months indoors.
Definitely has some nice structure to it.That’s the seedsmen original Haze plant has the ability to get ultra gigantic…
I was thinking more about places like Thailand and India where you'd be looking at summer temps of over 35-40C. But thanks for that. The other building blocks of haze are supposedly Mexico and Colombia.
I actually live in the sub tropics and get frequent temps above 35. Always used to mystify me when I read grow books that say that this is too hot for cannabis.
Looks amazing Raco.Monkey Haze F2
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By the same size, it looks even more NLD than the THH P1 stock....
i feel the genetics back then were more vigorous ,Interesting discussion @Chi13, @Donald Mallard.
From my personal experience I’ve never found limits in temp or water. Many days of +40 C has never worried my plants and inundation by over a metre of water was fine. I felt they can handle as much water as possible, it’s just needs a good soil structure to aid drainage and oxygen penetration. I had a few plants in a creek bed that went 3-4 foot under for 2-3 days in peak summer. Growth was off the charts, way more than Wally’s example. Friable alluvial soil and not a longer period of inundation, the plants were fine.
Not sure who wrote it (Clarke maybe) but I agree there’s a relationship between volume of water transpired and volume of plant material produced.
Once I achieved 10 feet in 10 weeks, in a patch of 10 plants. Just sweet timing in good volcanic soil, no watering required as rainfall was relentless and being the 90s, the genetics (from Coffs) were perfect. Hard to find those strains now.
Re Kanga’s location, totally unique, subtropical, overlap of two large climatic biomes, wet autumn’s, high heat Nov-March with ok but depleted soils. Pics look like Goonengary, Huonbrook way .
I’m pretty on par for lat., but long. puts me in better soils, higher temps and less but still high rainfall. I shake my head at people’s focus on Indica in the region. It’s good to have in your garden but sativas are meant to be here.
Unlikely ,Forget Haze what I wanna know….
Are Hempy & Wally gonna hug it out over their mutual distaste of Canna T; common ground can do miraculous things; as they say !!
I used to live in the great dividing range behind Coffs and we would often drive down to pick mushrooms in Bellingen, and score weed. Some of the genetics from around Coffs in the 80s were incredible! We picked up a hippy hitch hiker once who paid us in buds to drive him home. Gave us half a bag of the most incredible stuff. Happy days.Interesting discussion @Chi13, @Donald Mallard.
From my personal experience I’ve never found limits in temp or water. Many days of +40 C has never worried my plants and inundation by over a metre of water was fine. I felt they can handle as much water as possible, it’s just needs a good soil structure to aid drainage and oxygen penetration. I had a few plants in a creek bed that went 3-4 foot under for 2-3 days in peak summer. Growth was off the charts, way more than Wally’s example. Friable alluvial soil and not a longer period of inundation, the plants were fine.
Not sure who wrote it (Clarke maybe) but I agree there’s a relationship between volume of water transpired and volume of plant material produced.
Once I achieved 10 feet in 10 weeks, in a patch of 10 plants. Just sweet timing in good volcanic soil, no watering required as rainfall was relentless and being the 90s, the genetics (from Coffs) were perfect. Hard to find those strains now.
Re Kanga’s location, totally unique, subtropical, overlap of two large climatic biomes, wet autumn’s, high heat Nov-March with ok but depleted soils. Pics look like Goonengary, Huonbrook way .
I’m pretty on par for lat., but long. puts me in better soils, higher temps and less but still high rainfall. I shake my head at people’s focus on Indica in the region. It’s good to have in your garden but sativas are meant to be here.
best bananas and pineapples ive had in recent times were either from my garden , or in thailand ,I used to live in the great dividing range behind Coffs and we would often drive down to pick mushrooms in Bellingen, and score weed. Some of the genetics from around Coffs in the 80s were incredible! We picked up a hippy hitch hiker once who paid us in buds to drive him home. Gave us half a bag of the most incredible stuff. Happy days.
It almost can't get too hot for sativa cannabis provided you do right by the plant.
And as bananas were brought up earlier, some very tasty bananas from Coffs and Tully, both hot areas.
I agree and I think it was a lot more stable, you could keep males in veg indefinitely and reveg worked better,easier to clone, and consitenti feel the genetics back then were more vigorous ,
they dont seem as vigorous these days ..
would love to have some of that stuff from the 90s back again for sure man ...
kanga was in casino previously, he did a lot of work on his soil from memory ...
Unlikely ,
anyhow canna t is on holidays for a week from this thread ,
he was warned more than once ,
not a great idea telling old folks their favorite cannabis is shit continually ,
and not having any first hand experience of what they talk about ,
we know what we like ... lol ...
looks more like how they tie up some boned and stuffed meats,, lol ..
no one knows how to do selection there any longer,, the days of the quality they had,
is for now nonexistent,, though there may be a few standouts, as a whole,, doubtful,
they need to be selecting for potency, over and over, as they did in the old days ...
the modern stuff won't hold a candle to the original maybe never as the focus is on capital gains at the expense of quality and potency ...
I wonder how many of the Gorilla Glue's, Skittles, Wedding Cakes, or whatever other trendy, popular cannabis types you want to name... could grow like this, completely unknown and unattended, on the north side of the house, with no direct sunlight, water, fertilizer, etc., in a recycled soil pile???? :i feel the genetics back then were more vigorous ,
they dont seem as vigorous these days ..
would love to have some of that stuff from the 90s back again for sure man ...