What in the hell?

PattyWagon

Well-Known Member
image.jpg
What do you guys think? Could it be a mutation? 3 first and 3 true leaves. It's Kalishinkova by green house seeds. All others are normal.
 

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racerboy71

bud bootlegger
It is not really that unusual - called Tri-foliate I believe.
Although they do look very cool.
beat me to it gwn. yah, like said, called tri-folates.. some people claim tri's are more potent, but i don't think it's even been proven one way or another..
will probably also yield a bit better as well. :D
 

errb

Active Member
very sweet looking. make sure you continue to post up pics as she matures!

E.
 

Omgwtfbbq Indicaman

Well-Known Member
i had alot of these, genetics, usually they become males, the females are nice but tend to show signs of other mutations like 'flat stems' and the fact that if you fim them they turn into a crazy bush.
 

ru4r34l

Well-Known Member
I must add this is one killer strain, I grew this out about 8 months ago and yield was solid (5oz 2 week veg, 9 week flower) and was very potent; ordered a 5 pack and will try and add this to my perpetual but I cut her early at 9 weeks, probably could have let her go until about week 11 or so; I don't think she's going to cut it in the perpetual.

Never had a tri-foliate, maybe one of the others will :) Good luck keep posting updates I want to see how she turns out.

regards,
 

PattyWagon

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the info gentlemen. You guys rock! I plan on keeping her as a possible addition to my mothers. Always looking for a mutant or polyploid. But I'll take a trifoliate. Will she continue to grow in sets of three or return to normal leaf growth? Or is impossible to determine.
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
Thanks for the info gentlemen. You guys rock! I plan on keeping her as a possible addition to my mothers. Always looking for a mutant or polyploid. But I'll take a trifoliate. Will she continue to grow in sets of three or return to normal leaf growth? Or is impossible to determine.
Given normal conditions they will typically exhibit that growth pattern until she (we all hope for your sake) shows sexual maturity and moves into alternating nodes.
 

PattyWagon

Well-Known Member
Given normal conditions they will typically exhibit that growth pattern until she (we all hope for your sake) shows sexual maturity and moves into alternating nodes.
Good to know. But its possible to not show sexual maturity? I thought reproductive organs will come no matter as long as the age of the plant is reached. Its encoded in the genes.
 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
I had a blueberry that grew in sets of three. It did not produce very well.
If I see another, I will kill it.
 

blacksun

New Member
Nice!

The two that I've had that I've grown out I've noticed very slightly tighter internodal spacing.

Both were from green house seeds coincidentally.

GHS cheese and GHS great white shark.

I do not know if they produced more or less than normal as I only did one of each from seed. Not sure if a normal cheese or GWS would produce more, less, or the same.
 

PattyWagon

Well-Known Member
Nice!

The two that I've had that I've grown out I've noticed very slightly tighter internodal spacing.

Both were from green house seeds coincidentally.
0
GHS cheese and GHS great white shark.

I do not know if they produced more or less than normal as I only did one of each from seed. Not sure if a normal cheese or GWS would produce more, less, or the same.
Was there 3 bud sites instead of the usuall 2 at the nodes?
 
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