a1uswazz
Active Member
I no this thread is a bit old But just wanted to show my green crack from HSO. I also have done there OG KUSH very solid.
I no this thread is a bit old But just wanted to show my green crack from HSO. I also have done there OG KUSH very solid.
does it keep you rollinI no this thread is a bit old But just wanted to show my green crack from HSO. I also have done there OG KUSH very solid.
The clones will be identical to the plant from which they were cut. If the were leafy then the clones will follow suit.
Environment determines phenotypes in my experience and here is an amazing example of why. My friend and I bought the same clones from a dispensary from the same cut. We both grew in different environments and his was totally green and mine turned purple( I used LED's and he used HID ) my temps are a lot lower and my grow room a lot better dialed in than his, my nutrients were better administered so I got a much higher quality product that looked completely different than the clone he grew.Helping a plant reach its potential is not the same as it changing. About the only difference in a plant and its clone is clones won't grow as uniform as its mother. But the plant will still be indentical, if that makes sense. You may dial in your nutes, get the temps under control or get rid of pests but you're not changing its DNA.
Environment determines phenotypes in my experience and here is an amazing example of why. My friend and I bought the same clones from a dispensary from the same cut. We both grew in different environments and his was totally green and mine turned purple( I used LED's and he used HID ) my temps are a lot lower and my grow room a lot better dialed in than his, my nutrients were better administered so I got a much higher quality product that looked completely different than the clone he grew.
Sorry I don't have more technical data but I'm a gardener not a scientistphenotype = genotype + other contributing factors (environment)
Reliability of wikipedia notwithstanding, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genotype-phenotype_distinction
Two plants with the same genotype (clones) can actually exhibit different phenotypes in the field.
Now, if you really want to make the distinction is kind of up to how much science you like to drag into your gardening. I like things technical, but I don't think I'm in the majority here.