The Mantis

Well-Known Member
lol...no. It is the new plastic jam jars. They come in a 4 pack in 1 pint (473ml green lids) and 1/2 pint sizes(purple lids). I use them for my personal smoke. I used glass mason jars forever and then i broke one with 2 oz of Dubstep. So plastic works for the personal stash VERY well and no more breaking shit.
The link in your sig to your grow journal is broken fyi :)
 

gwheels

Well-Known Member
Esosseeds Welchie (LVTK X Grape Sato). This is really sticky and needed some wiring this morning to hold buds up.
I have 1 of them in a 3 gallon coco pot but it is not as magnificent as this 6.5 gallon autopot. Always chasing sludge with the system but now im running h202 sterile so the plants are staying healthier.
It is almost at the limit of height (6 inches under max light height).
DSCF2983.JPG
Schwaggy Skunky VA. The stankiest veg plant i ever smelled. These are in the double bubble (2 cell bubble bucket powered by a 2 port air pump driving 4-14 inch stones). I forgot how great skunk really is in my pursuit of the fruity and unusual terps.
This will be GREAT smoke. And the first regs that i have run in my new garden. I tend to stick to Fems for simplicity but i have tasty fire in regs.
DSCF2977.JPG
 

genuity

Well-Known Member
Any one know wat the GW is made of??
Ghost town f2 x Swayze
Whistling past the graveyard means putting on a brave face, doing something that distracts you from your fear, doing something that hides your fear from others. The idiom whistling past the graveyard is believed to have originated in the United States, though the roots of the sentiment expressed in the idiom may be found in a poem called The Grave, written by the Scottish poet, Robert Blair, in 1743: “Oft in the lone church-yard at night I’ve seen, / By glimpse of moon-shine, chequering through the trees, /
The school-boy, with his satchel in his hand, / Whistling aloud to bear his courage up…” Surely the idea of whistling to bolster one’s courage is an old one, and whistling while one passes a graveyard is probably equally as old. Related phrases are whistle past the graveyard, whistles past the graveyard, whistling past the graveyard.
 

thenotsoesoteric

Well-Known Member
Esosseeds Welchie (LVTK X Grape Sato). This is really sticky and needed some wiring this morning to hold buds up.
I have 1 of them in a 3 gallon coco pot but it is not as magnificent as this 6.5 gallon autopot. Always chasing sludge with the system but now im running h202 sterile so the plants are staying healthier.
It is almost at the limit of height (6 inches under max light height).
View attachment 4405947
Schwaggy Skunky VA. The stankiest veg plant i ever smelled. These are in the double bubble (2 cell bubble bucket powered by a 2 port air pump driving 4-14 inch stones). I forgot how great skunk really is in my pursuit of the fruity and unusual terps.
This will be GREAT smoke. And the first regs that i have run in my new garden. I tend to stick to Fems for simplicity but i have tasty fire in regs.
View attachment 4405948
Looking great G! Just wait till those skunks start to flower out, you won't be able to smell anything but those bad girls!
 

C-theGrower

Well-Known Member
Ghost town f2 x Swayze
Whistling past the graveyard means putting on a brave face, doing something that distracts you from your fear, doing something that hides your fear from others. The idiom whistling past the graveyard is believed to have originated in the United States, though the roots of the sentiment expressed in the idiom may be found in a poem called The Grave, written by the Scottish poet, Robert Blair, in 1743: “Oft in the lone church-yard at night I’ve seen, / By glimpse of moon-shine, chequering through the trees, /
The school-boy, with his satchel in his hand, / Whistling aloud to bear his courage up…” Surely the idea of whistling to bolster one’s courage is an old one, and whistling while one passes a graveyard is probably equally as old. Related phrases are whistle past the graveyard, whistles past the graveyard, whistling past the graveyard.
NICE... dope little story behind the strain. I can digg it..
 

nc208

Well-Known Member
@genuity , how many different types of phenos did you see in the Dulce Cherry Punch f2? I got 4 plants going in veg right now and 3 are looking pretty similiar with 1 being a dude, but the other female is distinctively different in showing darker fatter leaves. Just curious on any phenos you observed.
 

silverhazefiend

Well-Known Member
Wassup chuckers I need some help I’m trying my hardest to stop buying seeds and only get what I can use for breeding here’s my reason

With the availability of these clones now buying a cross with the same clones I have seems kinda redundant unless it’s a killer male used and with seed companies coming out by the dozen every week who knows were the testers nowadays

So because I like gas I try to narrow it down to who has the best gas in seed form .. now that’s the problem who has a good male to start with that hasn’t been whored out already at this point I’m about to pop all my old seeds from 2010 and see what I can use unless u guys have any ideas
 

genuity

Well-Known Member
@genuity , how many different types of phenos did you see in the Dulce Cherry Punch f2? I got 4 plants going in veg right now and 3 are looking pretty similiar with 1 being a dude, but the other female is distinctively different in showing darker fatter leaves. Just curious on any phenos you observed.
20190217_172042.jpg
This the only one I ran,I still need to pop more...
But like you,they all looked the same
20181228_213516.jpg
This was the male(I believe) used in the f2s.. at one point them middle fingers was sticking up like 2 thumbs, but after I seen it was a male... all I could see is the double middle finger source (1).gif

But I imagined most of the females to look very much like twins,shorter plants,that hold the buds tightly to the vest.very sweet smells(sugary? ) syrup?
I'll be putting some more down soon.
 
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