Take some of those feral growing plants and use them to add some hardiness to the cultivated stuff!
Heck ya @DougDawson Iād be down for some yellow dust lol those plants are looking awesome
Damn, your native soil must be good too. Those are some awesome genetics even with being hemp. Just need to work some more cannabinoids in there.
@Seamonkey84 That, or maybe do the opposite? Introduce some male pollen to the feral hemp thatās from high cannabinoid MJ males while culling out the male ferals. Maybe throw a few MJ females in there too in case some feral pollen goes around. Do this for several seasons and rhino may have a new awesome guerrilla strain on his hands! Real backyard breeding!
I love this. Iāve had these thoughts, but I just needed some confirmation. The plant I cut from the 6or so I saw last year had pretty decent smoke. Could of tasted better, but I didnāt really take the time to cure it property. also it had a few seeds, but only like 50 from the 13 ish grams when I weighed it. It was too dry though. This year Iāll toss some good pollen (PPPā:wink:)on some, and maybe if I can find them all cull the males. Weāll see. Lots to do out here.
I totally support your efforts in this and wish you the best of success in it. Maybe even get a little thread going. āTaming the feral cannabisā Iād love to follow along and Iām sure others would too. We totally need innovative projects like this to bring new cannabis varieties to the table.
Iām interested, but still hesitant to document. Dumb kansas needs to figure their laws out. I canāt help it growing naturally tho. gotta plant my outdoor girls so they look like volunteers. Hah
If anyone wants some seeds from last yearās lady I cut. Iād gladly share. They are so small compared to what Iām used to. We called that plant phoenix because she some how survived the burn when we were clearing the thatch. Thatās probably why there are so many this year. They can actually see the light and donāt have yearās of grass holding them down.
This will be fun regardless. Thanks for the motivation.
Iād totally be interested in some seeds from it. Might have to start my own little patch.
The wife and I had an outdoor crop growing down in Florida 1984. A camper parked in the middle so we could āwatch overā our babies, lol. Anyhow, weād toss any seeds found out the window of the camper by the table. We found a bush volunteer growing over our homemade septic system, dug it up and transplanted into a secret growroom inside camper. Kept that gal growing for several years! Clones cut and grew was some awesome ass grass!!
I say go for it! Ya never know how itāll turn out until you give it a try, lol
editā¦ that gal just kept growing and growing lol When itād get to 8ā tall and looking like a christmas tree, in the room we had for it, Iād cut it back a few feet and itā just grow back up and curl downwards lol Unfortunately we lost it after a few years in a flood. Fond memories of it though!
Shoot me an address and I send you some!
Looks like fasciation.
Could be but it really did not make it elongated, itās 2 separate buds. Either way is still pretty cool. Itās like it topped itself, lol. Also interesting to see the stock on this plant. It goes to the right and than up which is weird since I did not do any training. It also shot a root out of the stock well above ground which I have not seen before either. This thing really wanted to live.
I canāt remember the name of it but it reminds me of that trait where the plant will have a square stem but no branches and just piles of leaves. The buds will often just stack up side by side.
nice! I tend to get a few volunteer plants each year after a breeding project. Did you plant there previously? or did they spring up from seed that was already there?
That would be pretty cool to inherit an outdoor line from the previous owners of the property.
if the smoke is good and itās adapted well enough to your grow environment to perpetuate by self seeding, you might want to keep a nice looking male and let the line seed again to keep it around.
Well, last year there was about 6 or 7 volunteer plants. We had just moved there in April, and the place was so overgrown. But we found them and clears the āweedsā from around them. I had some females I put out there that were nearby, so I was culling the males. There were no seeds in my plants, but the one female that looked pretty good, had some. But we had burned a bunch of thatch that was in that area last fall, and this year thereās tons of volunteers. There could have been some that seeded it I never found, but we were pretty thorough when we started identifying plants on the land. Weāre actually doing a study to see how the ecosystem changes as we remedy many invasives out there. Serecia lespediza, red cedar, Russian olive, crown vetch, teasel, and a couple others. Thanks DOT. Lol
But yeah. This year Iām gonna play with them. Want some beans from the one I harvested?
Also I donāt know, but the previous owners seemed like they didnāt partake, but thatās hard to know without asking. They definitely didnāt do a thing to their place the 15 years they lived there.
I had some grow like that way way back from bag seed. They didnāt produce anymore, maybe even less as i remember.
Ok all you PPP fans, here is your Saturday update. Now I know some of you wanted pollen so I decided to see what I have so far and I must say, at least a couple people will be getting some of this lovely yellow magic.
Those plants are looking mint bro, nice work
I missed the Big Bang last week but good job looking great! That sure seems like a ton of pollen. And a ton off seeded budsites!