What's new

Khalifa Genetics strains

Indika

Well-known member
Aladdin Skunk 2022
IMG-20220922-WA0000.jpeg
 

SonicNurse92

Active member
Hello Hampi,

ACE does some great work both in terms of breeding an preservation.

What you described sounds exactly like the Siberian Ruderalis.
These packs are the only one which contain 18 seeds instead of 12 (because they are naturally hard to germinate).
The Sheberghan seeds are HUGE and very easy to sprout.
Please contact our team for a replacement pack.

Have a great day,
Al
Hello Al,

l hope you're doing fine, thank you very much for your reply.

I'm really really sad because I lost all my previous work due to a family issue (8 strains, 12 selections). I used to live with my parents and they are like a mix of the DEA and R. Nixon so, lesson learned. At the moment, I'm focusing forward.

I made a reproduction of what I believed it was Sheberghan (1 male, 2 females) so I put some seeds to germinate. Indeed they are hard to germinate because they are Siberian Ruderalis not Sheberghan. Only 10 of 16 came out. After 3+ weeks the first males appeared in 1 liter pots. One week later the females showed up too.

The company were I was working as breeder and hashish maker (with the "we honour the plant" motto, pure BS lol) is run by tricksters so I had to make clones from the Kerala Chellakutti and everything else (PCK, Panama, Pineapple Banana Bud and Purple Satellite too but they died) and run away. I'm keeping 11 Kerala Chellakutti in water until they show first sings of rooting in the stem. Excited to try them indoors pretty soon. Is going to be a long and wild season.

I will contact with your team ASAP thanks again for your kindness.

I'd like to buy a couple strains more directly from you to take advantge of the stealth shipment with the replacement pack. PayPal i will use.

Gracias por tu ayuda amigo

Take care

Hampi
 

Old Piney

Well-known member
Hi folks here's a few pics of some Khalifa Genetic’s Moroccan Beldia I grew in New Jersey USA.They were started the first week in June and harvested the second week in September. They were grown in good soil with worm castings .l gave them one shot of week chicken manure tea and that was it. although it's still curing the taste and smell is sweet with a mild uplifting high .It's just lovely I'm not into the heavy hitters anymore .Unfortunately I had some problems with cutworms in the beginning so I only had three ,one male and two females. I made plenty of seeds and will do it again and add in a few purchases seed for genetic diversity next year.
 

Attachments

  • FE4CCAF9-56F4-47C1-9DF1-CAF2999CA782.jpeg
    FE4CCAF9-56F4-47C1-9DF1-CAF2999CA782.jpeg
    4.1 MB · Views: 269
  • 3A12A5DE-59FF-4FFE-871B-A84DCEBE05BF.jpeg
    3A12A5DE-59FF-4FFE-871B-A84DCEBE05BF.jpeg
    2.9 MB · Views: 265
  • A425F0FA-7767-45AD-BA01-EC96DA8D2739.jpeg
    A425F0FA-7767-45AD-BA01-EC96DA8D2739.jpeg
    2.1 MB · Views: 263
  • E49009D9-7673-4F18-8B8E-285BB41563B2.jpeg
    E49009D9-7673-4F18-8B8E-285BB41563B2.jpeg
    1.1 MB · Views: 247

Old Piney

Well-known member
Hello Kukac,

That is an excellent question.
The Desert Skunk did inherit the semi-autoflowering trait from the Beldia.
With autoflowering plants, the autoflowering trait is recessive and has to be recombined at the F2 generation after outcrossing it with a photoperiod strain (25% of the F2s will autoflower).
However, the Beldia's semi-autoflowering gene is DOMINANT which means that after crossing it with a regular photoperiod plant (the Aladdin's Skunk in this case), the F1 generation will also express the semi-autoflowering trait.

That being said, semi-auto does not mean auto. Semi auto plants usually start flowering after they've reached a certain height or when they experience some stress (the roots running out of space, the days beginner to get shorter...).
If the plants are started late in the season or are planted in some huge containers full of rich soil, they may start flowering later.

The Desert skunk will always be very early flowering no matter what but depending on the growing conditions/environment, most will finish in the first half of September whereas others may be done by the end of September.

Cheers,
Al
 
Last edited:

RobFromTX

Well-known member
Hello Al,

l hope you're doing fine, thank you very much for your reply.

I'm really really sad because I lost all my previous work due to a family issue (8 strains, 12 selections). I used to live with my parents and they are like a mix of the DEA and R. Nixon so, lesson learned. At the moment, I'm focusing forward.

I made a reproduction of what I believed it was Sheberghan (1 male, 2 females) so I put some seeds to germinate. Indeed they are hard to germinate because they are Siberian Ruderalis not Sheberghan. Only 10 of 16 came out. After 3+ weeks the first males appeared in 1 liter pots. One week later the females showed up too.

The company were I was working as breeder and hashish maker (with the "we honour the plant" motto, pure BS lol) is run by tricksters so I had to make clones from the Kerala Chellakutti and everything else (PCK, Panama, Pineapple Banana Bud and Purple Satellite too but they died) and run away. I'm keeping 11 Kerala Chellakutti in water until they show first sings of rooting in the stem. Excited to try them indoors pretty soon. Is going to be a long and wild season.

I will contact with your team ASAP thanks again for your kindness.

I'd like to buy a couple strains more directly from you to take advantge of the stealth shipment with the replacement pack. PayPal i will use.

Gracias por tu ayuda amigo

Take care

Hampi
Ive been eyeing the balkh and sheberghan hashplants. Is your overall experience with this strain been good? Good germination rates? Im not the biggest indica fan but ive read that hashplants have a real pleasant high thats better than todays hybrids. No couchlock or dirty effects. Not to mention the colors are just outstanding
 

Sipina

Member
Greetings!

This is a khalifa genetics RASOL himalayan sativa. I've had some other khalifa genetics plants that sadly got stolen by some nonappreciating poeple.
This photo was taken on the second of october. Almost a week ago from now. I am estimating she will finish around the middle of november.
The two plants look very beautiful with a lovely stem rub smell that I did not find so far in any hybrids. She has excellent heat resistance and excellent mold resistance and as you can probably understand she needs little fertilizer. I hope to post some more pictures in the coming days and weeks.

Have a great day!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20221002_172626.jpg
    IMG_20221002_172626.jpg
    3.7 MB · Views: 146
  • IMG_20221002_172615.jpg
    IMG_20221002_172615.jpg
    910 KB · Views: 146

Sipina

Member
The khalifa genetics strain RASOL himalayan landrace is slowly developing.

The plant on the photos is the better of the two phenotypes I have. It is darker, buds look and feel more dense and it responded much better to trimming. The only downside is that it shows a little of hermaphroditic tendency which so far is not presenting any serious issue. I'm curious to see how it will go from here.

Keep in mind that I only sprouted two seeds out of total twenty four. I am sure there's much more to discover there.

Have a good day!
 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    3.2 MB · Views: 165
  • 2.jpg
    2.jpg
    4.2 MB · Views: 158
Last edited:

Sipina

Member
Himalaya, Rasol village. Photos are from today. It is slowly becoming more resinous and developing a more pronounced smell. Since this plant is growing at my friend's place and I visited only very briefly I cannot say much about the details of aroma. I hope to do so next time in a week or two.

This landrace is coming from 32 north. Plant in the photos is growing at 46 north in a greenhouse.

Have a great day!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20221107_134410.jpg
    IMG_20221107_134410.jpg
    4.9 MB · Views: 180
  • IMG_20221107_134429.jpg
    IMG_20221107_134429.jpg
    712.3 KB · Views: 172
  • IMG_20221107_134438.jpg
    IMG_20221107_134438.jpg
    1.1 MB · Views: 162
  • IMG_20221107_134524.jpg
    IMG_20221107_134524.jpg
    1.2 MB · Views: 179

Sipina

Member
RASOLI update:

The two Rasoli plants had been harvested on 15th november. My friend says both plants could go for another week or so, however the weather got much worse and the daylight length is already under 10 hours, so they were harvested.

I will call the plant in the Rasoli #1 and one not shown Rasoli #2.

Both plants had a very strong vigor in growth. Also both plants were strongly topped, trained and grew in small pots to control their size. They started flowering in the beginning of September.

Rasoli #1 has a sweet aroma with notes of spices. Not a very strong aroma at this point. It responded better to training such as topping and bending the shoots and was higher yielding. It had good mold resistance in general but less so compared to Rasoli #2. Few week into flowering #1 had a few male flowers which were removed. After that no more male flowers were appearing.

Rasoli #2 has a pungent citrus, lime, mint aroma. It's much stronger in aroma than Rasoli #1 and very strong smelling plant even compared to modern hybrids. The final yield was less and the final plant structure was not as beautiful. However there was not a single spot of any mold on the Rasoli #2 and she did not show any male flowers at any point of her cycle.

Sadly there were no males present to make a preservation. I gave two seeds to my friend and both turned out to be females.

I am looking forward to make a little bit of a smoke report with the dried and somewhat cured flowers.
 
Top