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| Forums > Marijuana Growing > Cannabis Growing Outdoors > Breeding outdoors in northern latitudes, is it a problem? | ||
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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2017
Posts: 87
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If I grow a few plants not knowing if their good or bad phenos but I like the tastes or whatever and I mix them. Is it bad as in my latitude 51 will the thc and terpene levels go down over generations as they acclimatise or will they stay the same as I am not directly picking ones with low resin of course I want the good ones and I will try to pollinate good ones but I will not have many plants to choose from.any ideas?
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#2 | |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: scandinavia
Posts: 102
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Really fun to make seeds so I wish you the best of luck
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#3 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2017
Posts: 87
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Quote:
And when you mean 12/12 what do you mean for thc going down if the plant isn't exposed to at least 12/12 sunlight. I know that a lot of good strains naturally occur to latitude 37 (afghani, pamir, Turkish, Greek) and then lesser strength up to latitude 42 with some rudel Kyrgyzstani hash plants and some south Bulgarian hash plants which are not very strong like 4% thc but their used for charas and theire not cultivated, just wild. So. I know if I left some good genetic pips to grow over generations at my latitude of course they would turn to industrial hemp, but if I just say have 2 reg seeds and ones male and I chop it before it opens and I get the pollen out and I put the pollen in a large baggie and wrap that round a females branch and seal that so it pollinates one branch. Will over time if I did that and when trying to do that I wouldn't pick shitty phenols which don't grow strong or produce much resin, would I still have the same strength and terpene levels as the parents? While acclimatising to strain to the local weather by simply breeding them selectively in my climate. I can't explain more clearly really. |
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: scandinavia
Posts: 102
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#5 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2017
Posts: 87
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#6 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2016
Location: In Portland, next to the pipe
Posts: 1,283
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Breed outdoors if you want seeds that will perform outdoors is my opinion. Over the years I've never seen a loss of potency because of the latitude of breeding, pretty much the opposite. We kill the males that don't grow fantastically and any other runts, troublemakers or late bloomers - we culled 75% of them this year. Thats how we select good genes for outdoor growing in our region.
I never heard that stuff about 12/12 being the best way to breed anywhere else before. Here is a photo of the five guys, don't they look big, strong & healthy? The kind of dude you want your daughter bringing home from college
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5 members found this post helpful. |
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#7 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: NorItal
Posts: 76
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Get a good F1 cross unless you have the time and resources to work with P1 stock. Choose the best male and the best female, preferably short flowering female and late blooming male. Cross them to get F2. That generation will better suit your needs as F1 was grown in your local climate, hence it will be acclimatised. From this point on you can sift through phenos and try to get IBL or you can clone the pheno that meets your expectations best and make it a keeper. Hope that helps.
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#8 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,377
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I think it depends a lot on the local geography.
If you are further North and a hill, mountain, forest etc. block the sun, it shortens the growing season and you have to finish sooner. It also depends on protection from the elements. If you get a freezing rain at week 4 and the plants don't have some kind of protection (like a cold frame) ... the season often ends there. |
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#9 |
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Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 807
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2 members found this post helpful. |
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#10 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,377
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Quote:
Got bud. I also had a male plant, it flowered but the female plant (right next to it) just would not make seed (when pollenation occurred around freezing). Now the female plant is into a re-gen veg cycle and should make some more decent bud the next few months. I like the frost and respect the frost but maybe I'm a candidate for a bigger better cold frame or greenhouse
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1 members found this post helpful. |
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