cajun rose circle
Active Member
Has ANYBODY used, had good success and liked their seeds. Please someone give review.
The white rhino is doing great but is slow to grow vertically and has HUGE fan leaves covering undergrowth, the white eidow is two weeks old and turning into a hea of kale. The other three seeds in the black and white pack did not germ in soil at all, but the la privada and kannabia brands did in less than 36 hours. Then I looked on the greenhouse site and it turns out you have to go thru the steps of soaking in distilled or R/O water for a few hours to bring the seed up to the desired 80% moisture and then do the damp paper towel. when I did this they cracked right away. Part of me thinks these were the only viable seeds in the pack and that's why I was asking about other people trying them.They are a bit of a scam. They have the odd good phenotype but they sell a lot of shite. I have not been overly happy with anything i've grown from them. They appear to be very hit and mixx and alas i seem to have missed each time.
What does 'pukka' mean? my greenhouse white rhino is looking good but was real slow growing 'up' and I cropped it 2" too short but the undergrowth is coming out. I am leaving it in veg for two extra weeks to cycle my harvest more efficiently. The white widow is 3 weeks behind it and looks AWESOME so far.im growing out greenhouse cheese and lemon skunk at the minute. all germed great seem to growing great but still in veg so cant really comment but will be keeping an eye on this thread. and it does seem i have 2 different pheno types of the cheese fingers crossed 1 of them is pukka but the lemon skunk all seem uniform.
what about big bud strains? What are the most productive indicas - mostly incas out there?arjan's haze #1, wierd plant kinda weak at first, heady high, doesn't last long
white rhino, weak at best, lots of trimming for little quality product.
I'm not sure I under stand. Are you saying the lower the yield the higher the quality and vice versa? Or are you saying big yielders are of high quality?For simplicities sake, yield and quality are generally inversely proportional.