Who's Got The Fostiest Buds? Let's See How Frosty A Bud Can Really Get?

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
Guttation is right, that is what its called. I should have linked my entire post. Its not root sap, nor did I say it is. The roots take in water at night when the stomata in the leaves are closed, this creates a pressure in the plant which pushs it out. The sugars get pushed out not "root sap". Gj

https://www.rollitup.org/t/sap-like-honey-oil-on-buds.773329/
First off - READ the WHOLE post!

Well,,,I'm sorry but your research has left you with an incorrect answer. Nice try in researching it though!

Sweet sap is Phloem sap, just like I said...It happens, just like I said.

I said "root" as a basic understandable way to explain a difference between the 2! Water/nutrient mix's flow from the roots in the xylem - not the phloem cells! READ this on xylem and xylem sap... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xylem

The movement in phloem cells is due to Turger pressure

You have 2 different transportation systems mixed up! (but they do work together sometimes)

Here, read this again: Phloem is the living tissue that transports the organic compounds made during photosynthesis (known as photosynthate), in particular the sugar sucrose, to all parts of the plant where needed.

The sugars are NOT made in the roots! Roots do not photosynthesize!

I learned my answer in college! Not searching the net and coming to incorrect conclusions !!!

Say maybe this high school Biology class lesson, used by my sons, on the Transportation of photosynthate in plants will help you undedrstand.

https://www.boundless.com/biology/textbooks/boundless-biology-textbook/plant-form-and-physiology-30/transport-of-water-and-solutes-in-plants-183/transportation-of-photosynthates-in-the-phloem-699-11924/
 
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BuzzD2Kill

Well-Known Member
First off - READ the WHOLE post!

Well,,,I'm sorry but your research has left you with an incorrect answer. Nice try in researching it though!

Sweet sap is Phloem sap, just like I said...It happens, just like I said.

I said "root" as a basic understandable way to explain a difference between the 2! Water/nutrient mix's flow from the roots in the xylem - not the phloem cells! READ this on xylem and xylem sap... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xylem

The movement in phloem cells is due to Turger pressure

You have 2 different transportation systems mixed up! (but they do work together sometimes)

Here, read this again: Phloem is the living tissue that transports the organic compounds made during photosynthesis (known as photosynthate), in particular the sugar sucrose, to all parts of the plant where needed.

The sugars are NOT made in the roots! Roots do not photosynthesize!

I learned my answer in college! Not searching the net and coming to incorrect conclusions !!!

Say maybe this high school Biology class lesson, used by my sons, on the Transportation of photosynthate in plants will help you undedrstand.

https://www.boundless.com/biology/textbooks/boundless-biology-textbook/plant-form-and-physiology-30/transport-of-water-and-solutes-in-plants-183/transportation-of-photosynthates-in-the-phloem-699-11924/

"The sugars are NOT made in the roots! Roots do not photosynthesize!"

Your points are invalid. Your quoting shit I didnt post. Root sap, sugars made in roots. Your also explaining the same process, all I did was explain it in laymans tems. I can replicate this process by over watering my plants at night, when stomata are closed. Any who the sun is beautiful, so is the world around me, you my friend need better coffee! GJ!

 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
"The sugars are NOT made in the roots! Roots do not photosynthesize!"

Your points are invalid. Your quoting shit I didnt post. Root sap, sugars made in roots. Your also explaining the same process, all I did was explain it in laymans tems. I can replicate this process by over watering my plants at night, when stomata are closed. Any who the sun is beautiful, so is the world around me, you my friend need better coffee! GJ!


Your posting is wrong, your explanation is wrong, and your simply digging yourself a bigger hole! You have no real concept of plant physiology and function. It's NOT the same function at all! :dunce:

I supplied proper and correct information to counter your poorly researched internet mistake!

Whats leaking from from his BUD is phloem sap! I have answered this question several times before in the years I have been here...

In actuality, my points are 100% valid!

ALL "sap" flowing FROM the roots is transferred by the xylem! It contains the nutrient ions. It is NOT "sweet" and does not contain sugars! It ONLY flows up the plant....
That sweet sugary (sucrose) form of "sap" is created in the leaves during photosynthesis! It is transferred via the Phloem cells.


:finger:
 
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GroErr

Well-Known Member
The JTR was the fem that started the Blue Ripper cross and has been running for about 3 1/2 years, initial cross was with a very nice Blueberry male (that I eventually lost!). Then in the F1's I found a killer male that's still going and making all these babies, everything I hit with it turns to Gold :)

I have several males going and flowered many, but nothing that smells like this male. When I flower it out for pollen if I'm concerned about smell in the house I have to run a carbon filter in the tent. For the last week it generates as much smell as a flowering female. The frost seems to follow anything I hit :)

He's made F2's of the Blue Ripper and I have 2x keeper F2 fems that were just back crossed to this male coming out shortly. He's daddy to a fun chuck on my HSO Blue Dream which produced another keeper fem, which was just back-crossed to him again. And this latest chuck with the Harlequin female I've been running for a couple of years produced this one above. That's only the 10th or so seed I've run of the Blue Ripper x Harlequin and looking like a winner all-around, production, smell, and soon I'll see if it tastes as good as the other chucks. He gets multiple clones rooted before I cull him to keep him going :)
 
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