ok.
i would not lie to an honest someone. and i decided in the first place not to treat shady with shady. i got 8 out of ten to sprout in a controlled optimal environment. of those 8 all where male and only one was a keeper. i won't complain to the company till i try the other beans. i was asking an ethics question and i appreciate your honest and passionate response. if i get same or worse results from the rest of my seeds i will call it bunk. i have poped 100s of beans a few at a time and never have i seen results like this. if the males offspring with some dank i crossed it with is crappy i will be mad and feel ripped off because i know the strain and it should be dank. so i am giving sannies a chance but no more money in the mean time. if they respond like you did after everything then i will hope they get riped off cause false advertising is pretty low.
I understand your frustration but there is no way a breeder can produce all males seeds so you can't really blame your male female ratio on Sannies. Again it is just luck of the draw. Actually I guess if a breeder takes a male and reverses it with CS to produce female flowers, the breeder could supply all male seeds but that would take a lot of time and effort seeing as how each male plant reversed would only make a handful of seeds.
Again I know the pain you're feeling as I've been there many times myself. I buy a ten pack and germinate them all only to end up with one or two females. It sucks but that's the game.
If you want to improve your male to female ratio, use:
blue spectrum lightning
keep temperatures cooler
run lights at 14 hours on 10 hours off
have you nutrient solution higher in nitrogen than P or K
keep growing medium moist
Do all those thing for the first two weeks of the seedlings life and after two weeks return to your normal veg time and routine. Of course these things will not always improve male to female ratios but both Ed Rosenthal and Jorge Cervantes suggest doing as such and when I actually follow the routine I see improve ratio over 50% but not always.