then male seeds come from male buds? \:Many people dont realise that getting a seeds from a female bud WILL produce a female plant! i have tried this theory many time and always ended up with all females. So save those seeds bros!!!
And we have our Darwin award winner for 2010........Thats quote is going to end up in alot of sigs....Many people dont realise that getting a seeds from a female bud WILL produce a female plant! i have tried this theory many time and always ended up with all females. So save those seeds bros!!!
you got to give it to him for having a hell of a luck for getting only females from his seeds..And we have our Darwin award winner for 2010........
*facepalm*Many people dont realise that getting a seeds from a female bud WILL produce a female plant! i have tried this theory many time and always ended up with all females. So save those seeds bros!!!
you may need to rethink your statement...many people dont realise that getting a seeds from a female bud will produce a female plant! I have tried this theory many time and always ended up with all females. So save those seeds bros!!!
HOLY SHIT!!!!! I leave this Forum for a few years, and what do you know. The first thread I read is this one. Who the hell let this guy out of the loony bin? Anyone that believes what this guy is saying. I have a Plant to sell you that will not only produce the best buds you have ever seen, but will roll itself into blunts if you just ask it nicely.Many people dont realise that getting a seeds from a female bud WILL produce a female plant! i have tried this theory many time and always ended up with all females. So save those seeds bros!!!
u ppl must not know alot about hermie. if a natural female hermies, it produces female pollen. when pollenating female buds with female pollen you ensure the female gene. ive got random seeds off plants, 1-3 per plant. and they all end up female next year. females self pollinate all the time, its the marijuanas survival instinct, and the seeds should be expected to be female. maybe with a slightly higher chance of hermieing. but i havent had bad experiences.HOLY SHIT!!!!! I leave this Forum for a few years, and what do you know. The first thread I read is this one. Who the hell let this guy out of the loony bin? Anyone that believes what this guy is saying. I have a Plant to sell you that will not only produce the best buds you have ever seen, but will roll itself into blunts if you just ask it nicely.
u ppl must not know alot about hermie. if a natural female hermies, it produces female pollen. when pollenating female buds with female pollen you ensure the female gene. ive got random seeds off plants, 1-3 per plant. and they all end up female next year. females self pollinate all the time, its the marijuanas survival instinct, and the seeds should be expected to be female. maybe with a slightly higher chance of hermieing. but i havent had bad experiences.
You should actually TRY it sometime rather than just listening to hearsay on the internnet. I have never once had a fem seed plant hermie.Hey, Tagyouit, I am sorry for my outburst. It just blew my mind to read that post first thing back. And yes, I feel strongly about not useing hermied, feminized or what ever kind of wierd off the wall seeds. I really hate the genetic tappering some scientist are doing. One of these days this type of crap is going to really bite us on the A$$.
Here is part of an article in Cannabus Culture Magazine. This was a statement from a breeder. The last sentence made a big point to me.
Now we had ten different hybrid genetics in total with two clones from each to work with and choose from. Even though we were making great strides, we wanted a room full of the same breed with the same size and characteristics. Basically, we wanted many copies of one great female plant so made the decision to play “Breeding Hermans”. We took two clones from one female plant, stressed one of the clones until it developed male sex organs, and then bred it with the other female clone. To our delight it worked – we ended up with seeds that grew into females 85-90 percent of the time and were consistent with the original female plant’s characteristics. We could now plant around 30 to 40 seeds and end up with 30 female plants the same size with the same genetics. We were ecstatic.
However, silver linings often have a cloud attached and it was true in this case. The female plants that developed from hermaphroditic seeds had the drawback of being far more likely than ordinary plants to develop male branches – turn “Herman” – when stressed. More than once, a power, pump or light failure caused enough stress to the plants that they easily went hermaphroditic. Outdoors we had even more trouble; in bad-weather years we could end up with a plant from a feminized seed developing male flowers and blowing pollen all over the other plants, ruining our dreams of a sinsemilla crop. We decided that feminized plants might have a place in our business’ industry, but it wouldn’t be in our gardens.