Humboldt Seed Organization

MasterMiller

Well-Known Member
Anyone use HSO genetics here. I started with them and wonder if I should just stick with them or jump around. To different companies. I'm a noob so mind my question.
 

chillok

Well-Known Member
running two Raspberry Diesel right now, spent months going round trying to pick two beans to run with a Delehaze and Super Lemon. RD are indeed rapid veg, very healthy. What strain you thinking OP?
 

BB Boomer

Well-Known Member
Grown out several HSO varieties and they have always had outstanding germination rates that sprout vigorous seedlings.
Current HSO beans in my stable:

Blue Dream
OG Kush
Green Crack
Bubba Kush
Trainwreck
Chemdawg
707 Headband

Been thinking about getting their Chocolate Mint OG. It sounds tasty.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Grown out several HSO varieties and they have always had outstanding germination rates that sprout vigorous seedlings.
Current HSO beans in my stable:

Blue Dream
OG Kush
Green Crack
Bubba Kush
Trainwreck
Chemdawg
707 Headband

Been thinking about getting their Chocolate Mint OG. It sounds tasty.
Currently running Chocolate Mint OG, Raspberry Diesel, Lemon Garlic OG, and '91 Chemdawg (their Sativa-dominant Chemdawg; it seems they're putting out Chemdawg #4 now, the indica dominant one.)

The Chocolate Mint OG doesn't look it right now, because I trimmed and trained the shit out of it, but that one grows incredibly vigorously. Like, super fast.

I ran Lemon Garlic OG last run. Beautiful plant, AND she hits like a truck. Quasipsychedelic. My friend said it felt like the weed took their face off. Hands down, the strongest some of my friends and their friends ever smoked.
IMG_5275.JPG
 

BB Boomer

Well-Known Member
Currently running Chocolate Mint OG, Raspberry Diesel, Lemon Garlic OG, and '91 Chemdawg (their Sativa-dominant Chemdawg; it seems they're putting out Chemdawg #4 now, the indica dominant one.)

The Chocolate Mint OG doesn't look it right now, because I trimmed and trained the shit out of it, but that one grows incredibly vigorously. Like, super fast.

I ran Lemon Garlic OG last run. Beautiful plant, AND she hits like a truck. Quasipsychedelic. My friend said it felt like the weed took their face off. Hands down, the strongest some of my friends and their friends ever smoked.
View attachment 3906032
Yeah mine is 91 Chemdawg as well. I have heard that the Blue Dream can express a indica dominant pheno but mine have always been on the sativa side of things. I guess it's possible though with the Blueberry in it.

Make sure you give us a heads up on your raspberry diesel grow. I have been eyeballing that one too.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Yeah mine is 91 Chemdawg as well. I have heard that the Blue Dream can express a indica dominant pheno but mine have always been on the sativa side of things. I guess it's possible though with the Blueberry in it.

Make sure you give us a heads up on your raspberry diesel grow. I have been eyeballing that one too.
Oh, bro. I rubbed the leaves and they smell like straight fresh cherries from a Central Market farmstand. Like biting into a cherry.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
cool cheers alleles never heard of that word google time lol
Interchangeable genes on a chromosome in a strand of DNA.

"An allele (/əˈliːl/) [1][2] is the variant form of a given gene.[3] Sometimes, different alleles can result in different observable phenotypic traits, such as different pigmentation. However, most genetic variations result in little or no observable variation.

The word "allele" is a short form of allelomorph ("other form", a word coined by William Bateson[4]), which was used in the early days of geneticsto describe variant forms of a genedetected as different phenotypes. It derives from the Greek prefix ἀλλήλ, allel, meaning "reciprocal" or "each other", which itself is related to the Greek adjective ἄλλος (allos; cognate with Latin "alius"), meaning "other".

Most multicellular organisms have two sets of chromosomes; that is, they are diploid. These chromosomes are referred to as homologous chromosomes. If both alleles at a gene (or locus) on the homologous chromosomes are the same, they and the organism are homozygous with respect to that gene (or locus). If the alleles are different, they and the organism are heterozygous with respect to that gene."
 
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