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| Forums > Marijuana Growing > Marijuana Strains and Breeding > Landraces > Old New Zealand landrace acclimatized in the UK? | ||
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#1 | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: neither here nor there
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Old New Zealand landrace acclimatized in the UK?
I recently acquired some seeds which are reputedly a New Zealand landrace which was brought back to Scotland where it was acclimatized and then brought down to Northern England where it was IBL'd.
I have a little info on this strain that came from another forum, but was wondering if anyone on here might be able to add to it, or comment/speculate about NZ landraces in general/which NZ landrace it might be? Quote:
Quote:
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Previous Grows: Rombolt and Trainwreck S1 outdoor 2013 (organic/outdoor) Blowfish/Trainwreck S1s and Taskenti (organic/outdoor) I dug too deep I think!
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#2 |
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Heirloom Grower
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: 42N
Posts: 1,434
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Wow sounds interesting, definitely one of those priceless stories often seen in the community... Australian Norfolk would make more sense than Norfolk/England but I'll definitely take a seat now! Normally when tropical strains are acclimatised into colder climates and heavily bred towards early maturing they loose a lot of their punch and character.
I had the same case with some an old 70s african strain kept in northern Spain by some old farmers and reproduced since then (that should be at least F30 IBL lol). The guys told me they usually chop in September and just let the plants (males and females) do their job, so I guess the strain degenerated a lot already. Basically they didn't have idea of the treasure they may have right there until I spoke to them and asked for the oldest seeds they had! When this kind of plants are chopped soon and only the earliest plants are harvested, usually all the viable seeds also come from the fastest males and females so the strain evolves really fast towards fast flowering year after year. But all the genetic information and potential of the late flowering plants is lost too. I guess it will be a hard task but some genes should still be there, right? Maybe they just need an opposite late flowering selection under sunny weather for the best potent plants to restore a bit of the magic and original character of the strain. But wrong selection and care of a heirloom can definitely harm it more than preserving it in this case. Any pics of the scottish-kiwi plants?? Similar cases have been done in Switzerland, Denmark and so on with many other strains. Keep us updated! ![]() Vibes. |
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3 members found this post helpful. |
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#3 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Thanks for the reply Mustafunk. I have to say I've just tried smoking the first early outdoor grown quick-dried samples of a pure Afghan landrace that was supposedly acclimatized in Denmark and now goes by the name "Viking". The effects are very promising to say the least, so I'm hopeful that Thaedra might be a similar case
![]() Here are a couple of pics of the Thaedra: Also some of my Viking which has two distinct phenos. Slender and tall pheno:
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Previous Grows: Rombolt and Trainwreck S1 outdoor 2013 (organic/outdoor) Blowfish/Trainwreck S1s and Taskenti (organic/outdoor) I dug too deep I think!
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#4 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Viking "bushy" pheno:
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Previous Grows: Rombolt and Trainwreck S1 outdoor 2013 (organic/outdoor) Blowfish/Trainwreck S1s and Taskenti (organic/outdoor) I dug too deep I think!
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2 members found this post helpful. |
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