Greenpoint seeds!!

boybelue

Well-Known Member
I was a seinfeld fan back then but Friends was huge throughout the 90s-2000s and still comes on everyday on at least 1 channel out of the hundreds.

My comment was sarcastic for sure though. Im one of those people that is clueless of 5/6 of the shows my friends and co workers talk about. I still havent watched an episode of game of thrones, lol.
Crammer was the shit, always had me rolling. Funniest show ever
 

quiescent

Well-Known Member
Thinking about it..... trying your hand at tissue culture might be the way to do it. Lots of sensitive clones that might be fixed with a tissue culture. Not a rocket genius or anything but I'm sure If anyone wanted to get into tissue culture they could. Been a common thing in horticulture for a grip I guess.
 

jayblaze710

Well-Known Member
Thinking about it..... trying your hand at tissue culture might be the way to do it. Lots of sensitive clones that might be fixed with a tissue culture. Not a rocket genius or anything but I'm sure If anyone wanted to get into tissue culture they could. Been a common thing in horticulture for a grip I guess.
Tissue culture isn’t difficult, but it’s not cheap. The most difficult aspect is keeping everything sterile, so at minimum you need a hood to remove contaminants and an autoclave for sterilization.
 

Heisenbeans

Well-Known Member
Tissue culture isn’t difficult, but it’s not cheap. The most difficult aspect is keeping everything sterile, so at minimum you need a hood to remove contaminants and an autoclave for sterilization.
I think that's great for in house genetics but gonna be a while before people start trading them.
 

quiescent

Well-Known Member
Tissue culture isn’t difficult, but it’s not cheap. The most difficult aspect is keeping everything sterile, so at minimum you need a hood to remove contaminants and an autoclave for sterilization.
I mean if that's what you focused on you could probably have an economy of scale and expertise to a point. I'm sure if it wouldn't help every temperamental clone only but it might be worth it for the plants destined to be flower at the end of production.
 

Greenthumbs256

Well-Known Member
ladies and gents, I just made a new tread for a sip vs hydro thing I'm trying to learn more about and I could use some of your amazing arguing and hating skillz! lmfao jk but come stop by guys I could use some advise and hopefully together we can all figure this shit out a Lil better!!!

if you grow hydro or u grow organic plz stop in and let me know u r point of view!!

https://www.rollitup.org/t/hydro-vs-rols-sip-pot.978851/
 

Greenthumbs256

Well-Known Member
Tissue culture isn’t difficult, but it’s not cheap. The most difficult aspect is keeping everything sterile, so at minimum you need a hood to remove contaminants and an autoclave for sterilization.
ya know my buddy came buy the other day and trying to convince my to try something called "splicing" where they basically cut an organg tree and cut a lemon tree, then basically tape the two ends together! and let them grow into each other! has anyone else ever tried that with a cannabis plant? just seems like too much bs and makes me wonder if it's even worth trying!
 

nobighurry

Well-Known Member
Lol...ya almost got me. The little thumbnail pic and the fuscia colored buds, drawing a nice stark contrast to the green buds and plant material behind it. I'm thinking..."hooooooly sheeeeit! That HAS got to be some fiyah!!!"
Until I blew up the pic.
Hate it for ya on the bud worms and environmental issues.
Yea I started supplementing Lighting the last week, daylight hours have gotten so short plus the sun is so low in the horizon she was only getting 5hrs direct sunlight, it really brought them around...
 

ShyGuru

Well-Known Member
Yes it will work with a cannabis plant but why would you want to? The reason they do that with citrus is to graft a tasty fruit cultivar to a disease resistant rootstock so there is a purpose. For cannabis you would need to identify a strong disease resistant rootstock and keep cuttings alive solely for the purpose of being rootstock as well as having clones you'd wish to graft to it. Unfortunately with cannabis being a schedule one substance there has been no scientific study done to identify which cultivars would make good rootstock. Also being a short season plant it wouldn't have the same work to reward ratio of a long lived tree
 

Greenthumbs256

Well-Known Member
Yes it will work with a cannabis plant but why would you want to? The reason they do that with citrus is to graft a tasty fruit cultivar to a disease resistant rootstock so there is a purpose. For cannabis you would need to identify a strong disease resistant rootstock and keep cuttings alive solely for the purpose of being rootstock as well as having clones you'd wish to graft to it. Unfortunately with cannabis being a schedule one substance there has been no scientific study done to identify which cultivars would make good rootstock. Also being a short season plant it wouldn't have the same work to reward ratio of a long lived tree
thank you!
 

thenotsoesoteric

Well-Known Member
ya know my buddy came buy the other day and trying to convince my to try something called "splicing" where they basically cut an organg tree and cut a lemon tree, then basically tape the two ends together! and let them grow into each other! has anyone else ever tried that with a cannabis plant? just seems like too much bs and makes me wonder if it's even worth trying!
Its called grafting in horticulture/agriculture. Its been done with weed but its not worth the time and effort, imo.
 

Getgrowingson

Well-Known Member
Thats good. I should have said indoor growers. Out electric costs are sky high.
Indoors either. Legal herb cheapest oz you can buy right now is 220$ and I’m sure it’s crap. Black market I can get fire that would blow that out of the water at almost half the price.
 
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