That stuck in my head… I think it has merit & could explain a lot.
Cheers
G
That stuck in my head… I think it has merit & could explain a lot.
Cheers
G
Fine art world is absolutely rife with that.
A Fool and his Money soon Parts
I keep hearing about thug pugs older stuff being sold at a high price so im just curious because I got some old thug pug. @vernal
Well grow it out and make some more!!! I wish I had some thug pug to work with. And 3rd coast
Yeah absolutely he gets super high prices, I don’t think it’s warranted whatsoever and the guy is super skeezy but people gotta board the hype train lol.
Lot of fake gear of his floating around though, easy to replicate and stupid expensive so is what it is. For $500/pop people don’t mind getting a purple plastic seed container and a cheap labelling machine.
I got some for that as well @anon93244739 but shit I wouldn’t mind selling a $60 pack of seeds for $500. Times are rough.
Idk. I figure consulting is probably the easiest way to launder money. Advice doesn’t require inventory.
Hahaha The simple village boy just bought some “magic” beans. what a tool!
I sometimes wish I could be a simple village boy and have an extra $20k laying around I can spend on worthless junk.
I got lucky and found these recently. I also grabbed some thug pug garlic breath 2.0 and bubblegum breath.
What the hell is going on you guys agree?
stranger things have happened.
Make more lol
The NFT world is super crazy right now. He might make 10 fold back on that purchase depending on what the demand is on whatever NFT he got.
If the NFT isn’t somehow linked to the value of the item it confirms ownership of, the market is complete speculation. I am not sure how many people could be much stupider than the person who bought this one. Such even-dumber people are the only market if he wants to flip it.
On I see what your saying. They used the NFT to confirm authenticity and ownership. Yeah thats super dumb on the buyers part to pay that. The first thing that came to mind when I read the article was the seeds must have came with some sort of 1 of a kind peice of art in an NFT form to be capturing that kind of $.
I forgot to list GMO x Mendo Breath in that seed list.
What’s so ironic is that the indigenous genetics available in South Africa are far more unique and will see a larger global market demand in coming years, than this complex polyhybrid bred indoors. Poor South African fool has purchased genetics that struggle in his own region, and are already being produced prolifically throughout North America. The genetics are not uncommon at all, really. I mean, the lineage may have exclusive claims, but we all know Gage Green isn’t exactly forthright with his breeding history anyways. The chemovars he carries and has named, are the same chemovars being bred with all over under different names, by amateur and professional alike.
What it comes down to is that it is highly unlikely any of those seeds will produce a plant sufficiently unique to produce repeat demand in a market place (beyond initial novelty) and almost assured that none of those seeds will bring about a plant that can be viably produced at scale.
This foolish investor’s best bet at finding something unique from that pack is to scour the countryside for local genetics, find exemplary specimens from active fields, and recombine them with the males from this $20,000 pack of seeds. It’ll take some good landrace/heirloom genetics to bring about anything unique from that polyhybrid mess of a lineage.
-Dr. Zinko