Exceptionally High FECO Yields

Ahoy there.
My morning began with a mess in the bloom room. The Cali Orange flower mass had overcome the strings hanging from the ceiling and tipped the whole plant over on her side. When I righted her she looked at me and said goodbye. Limp and midway into the drought application. The dry medium provides less ballast weight keeping her from tilting. The dryer the medium the less support. I gave her some water and tried to revive her but she was already done.

We hung 460 grams wet branch and bud. Smells awesome.

Seed experiment has not shown any life. This is second full day of waterboarding. We will try again with a different cocktail.
Glad it smells good, sorry you had to go through such a dramatic and stressful death. If stress is the ultimate factor, this one gave it all.
 
Pictures from the garden




 


 
@Pennywise
Just noticed your new haircut. good to see someone still with hair LOL
 
Ahoy there,
Garden updates like everything else is awkward feeling. One thing that feels the same is my gosh darn back. Anyhow...

The classic seed experiments had some success and some setbacks. We soaked a seed in ABA rich brass we have been cooking for a good year or so. The seed was submerged totally for 24 hours at around 82F. The seed husk was then examined under the scope for evidence of anything encouraging while preparing the waterboard arrangement. No splitting or cracking detected we advanced the seed to be waterboarded for up to 72 hours with inspections at twelve hour intervals. On the second day waterboarding we hit pay-dirt and a cute little tap root was presented. We carefully placed the seed in a coco puck and transferred it to our fancy new heat mat the size of a football field. That is where I killed it. With mat set at 80 the medium dried out much quicker than I figured. Dead...Fried like a chunk of bacon.

We will be having another go at it soon.
 
Ahoy there,
Garden updates like everything else is awkward feeling. One thing that feels the same is my gosh darn back. Anyhow...

The classic seed experiments had some success and some setbacks. We soaked a seed in ABA rich brass we have been cooking for a good year or so. The seed was submerged totally for 24 hours at around 82F. The seed husk was then examined under the scope for evidence of anything encouraging while preparing the waterboard arrangement. No splitting or cracking detected we advanced the seed to be waterboarded for up to 72 hours with inspections at twelve hour intervals. On the second day waterboarding we hit pay-dirt and a cute little tap root was presented. We carefully placed the seed in a coco puck and transferred it to our fancy new heat mat the size of a football field. That is where I killed it. With mat set at 80 the medium dried out much quicker than I figured. Dead...Fried like a chunk of bacon.

We will be having another go at it soon.
That's encouraging as it gets Maritimer! I told the doner about your work with them and he was so happy they might have a chance to become a living plant in 2020! Congratulations is totally in order! This is next to bringing back dinosaurs from dna in my book!
 
That's encouraging as it gets Maritimer! I told the doner about your work with them and he was so happy they might have a chance to become a living plant in 2020! Congratulations is totally in order! This is next to bringing back dinosaurs from dna in my book!
If I get one to take we will have a discussion with @Emilya and yourself about preservation options. Way over my head, but I got friends like you guys and girls who can splain it to me. :)

The next run is in week 2 of veg. Never included beans from the Chem Dawg strain before and to this point wow. I will grab a pic or two from the veg room later. The genetics are powerful, and prove to be among the finest I have observed. We got two Chem Dawgs, one Gorilla Glue #4 (not sexed) and one Seedman Cheese in 5 gal pots @Faux Pro-Mix. The clones at present are a GG#4, two chem dawgs, and two SM Cheese. All clones are looking good and plans have been made to resume MeJA foliar applications.

BTW The Alaskan Purple strain has been found a very suitable candidate for drought applications. Barney's Farm Triple Cheese was not subjected to a control verification (as we only ran one plant) but it did not do well in drought. We will follow up on this with a control based approach to the drought strain review in the next planting (2 weeks). Most higher THC strains do well in our studies.

Happy Easter my Brother. :green_heart:
 
Ship shape Maritimer! You've been running full speed ahead. Great to be busy in the garden. I have 3 getting some drought. Day 4, one day past their watering day. Mine are iffy for indicator leaves on some too but we don't need no stinking leaves! But for science. I can feel the house quake a bit when the trichs expand!
 
Ahoy there!
Preparations are underway for the harvesting of the last Alaskan Purple today.

The first concern was properly addressed utilizing 220@ Fahrenheit plates under ~ 6 tons of pressure for exactly (almost) 90 seconds. The collection of scrapings were then gathered into one glob of fresh pressed Northern Lights Rosin to be dispensed unto the gardener at appropriate intervals.

A thought has been coming to me about how so many of you produce awesome cola filled short little plants, while mine continue to disappoint when it comes to them @DonkeyDick colas on what looks like short plants compared to mine. I am starting to think it is all pointing back to the heinous practice of "quadlining" and I reckon it may be the clue. It may even be the quad practice is a requirement for the Donkey Dicks.

I will snap some action photos to alleviate quarantined boredom's any way I can. :bongrip:
 
Ahoy there!
Preparations are underway for the harvesting of the last Alaskan Purple today.

The first concern was properly addressed utilizing 220@ Fahrenheit plates under ~ 6 tons of pressure for exactly (almost) 90 seconds. The collection of scrapings were then gathered into one glob of fresh pressed Northern Lights Rosin to be dispensed unto the gardener at appropriate intervals.

A thought has been coming to me about how so many of you produce awesome cola filled short little plants, while mine continue to disappoint when it comes to them @DonkeyDick colas on what looks like short plants compared to mine. I am starting to think it is all pointing back to the heinous practice of "quadlining" and I reckon it may be the clue. It may even be the quad practice is a requirement for the Donkey Dicks.

I will snap some action photos to alleviate quarantined boredom's any way I can. :bongrip:
:rofl: That rosin sounds yummy!
I started quadlining from the get-go to maximise yield in a small space.
I have a bigger space now, but the quad-cept remains.
42E9FA35-4601-456F-8BEE-BECB044D528B.jpeg

You keep the canopy even, they just keep stacking. On this one two of the tops got away from me during stretch. I don’t think the effect was entirely wasted. I hope I will be though!

Stay safe all.
(Nice to meet Tennessee)
 
Ahoy there,
I understand if you skip this photo journey of my layout. But it helped pass some time.








 
:rofl: That rosin sounds yummy!
I started quadlining from the get-go to maximise yield in a small space.
I have a bigger space now, but the quad-cept remains.
42E9FA35-4601-456F-8BEE-BECB044D528B.jpeg

You keep the canopy even, they just keep stacking. On this one two of the tops got away from me during stretch. I don’t think the effect was entirely wasted. I hope I will be though!

Stay safe all.
(Nice to meet Tennessee)
I have my first bunch of quads running now. Hopefully they might turn our pretty like yours. :)
 
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