okay this doesn't make since ..

Kite High

Well-Known Member
Sure. A female plant or plants will have clones taken. The original female plant or plants will be forced to create bananas using colloidal silver or silver thiosulfate or gibberellic Acid (GA3) or Rodelization. The pollen from the male bananas will then be used to pollinate the crop of clones.

There is a great deal of confusion among the uninformed about feminized seeds and hermaphrodites. Many wrongly assume that a hermaphrodite pollinating itself is virtually the same thing as making feminized seeds, just with a different means being the cause for the bananas and pollen.

But that is not true. A female plant that turns, be it due to light stress or any other type of stress or the use of colloidal silver or silver thiosulfate or gibberellic Acid (GA3) or Rodelization, is still a stressed plant and one that would have a tendency of passing on the unwanted hermie trait to the seeds it would produce. The way to reduce that likelihood is to use the pollen on stress-free females.

Is there anything else you would like to know, like why that orange stuff forms on the top of chili, or something?
I see you are back in the saddle
 

WolfZen

Member
Sure. A female plant or plants will have clones taken. The original female plant or plants will be forced to create bananas using colloidal silver or silver thiosulfate or gibberellic Acid (GA3) or Rodelization. The pollen from the male bananas will then be used to pollinate the crop of clones.

There is a great deal of confusion among the uninformed about feminized seeds and hermaphrodites. Many wrongly assume that a hermaphrodite pollinating itself is virtually the same thing as making feminized seeds, just with a different means being the cause for the bananas and pollen.

But that is not true. A female plant that turns, be it due to light stress or any other type of stress or the use of colloidal silver or silver thiosulfate or gibberellic Acid (GA3) or Rodelization, is still a stressed plant and one that would have a tendency of passing on the unwanted hermie trait to the seeds it would produce. The way to reduce that likelihood is to use the pollen on stress-free females.

Is there anything else you would like to know, like why that orange stuff forms on the top of chili, or something?
I'm still lost on where you think there is a disagreement? I'm sure most breeders (commercial or @ home) do use clones for seed production. If that was point... I was already aware. It would still be 'self-pollination' if the pollen came from the same plant regardless if it's a cutting or not and I stated clearly in the quote you took that pollen was taken from one and then used on another.

But I do have another question: why do so many of your posts make me want to punch a baby?
 
Top