bodhi seeds

SFnone

Well-Known Member
Hmmm... i don't know... it could be... I know growing outdoors can help prevent hermies, but i also know certain strains suck outdoors... Less tolerant of ups and downs i guess... I don't know
 

the real mccoy

Well-Known Member
My understanding on the Bodhi strains that say outdoors is that they could possibly herm if grown indoors. I believe this is usually on strains that are not done being fully tested yet. I might be wrong but that is my take on the outdoor label from Bodhi.
That being said I ran one on my last round that had the outdoor label, indoors. I had one female that liked to throw nanners but the others were fine.

Cheers :)
Thought I read this before.
 

CopaGenetics

Well-Known Member
So anything that says outdoors hasn't been tested? Is that true for other breeders?
I dont think it means untested at all but that is my opinion from what I know and have heard. Bodhi lists strains as "Outdoor" that should be run outdoors (IN HIS OPINION). You can take your chances and run them indoors but be prepared to lolli and/or defoliate lowers and maybe even pick a few nanners off.

As far as what other breeders do/say/etc... you need to ask the other breeders.

I breed primarily for outdoors but have grown in and out since 1988. It's mostly strain dependent as some strains do really well in or out, some both, some only in or only out. For example I hate floppy stems and any cultivars that exhibit floppy-ass stems and weak branching get nixed out of my outdoor selections. Leafy plants (calyx to leaf ratio) are a nightmare to trim so I watch that carefully with any "outdoor" strains I am working with and only select and proceed with the traits that I think work for me and what purpose I have in mind for that particular strain.
 

hellmutt bones

Well-Known Member
I dont think it means untested at all but that is my opinion from what I know and have heard. Bodhi lists strains as "Outdoor" that should be run outdoors (IN HIS OPINION). You can take your chances and run them indoors but be prepared to lolli and/or defoliate lowers and maybe even pick a few nanners off.

As far as what other breeders do/say/etc... you need to ask the other breeders.

I breed primarily for outdoors but have grown in and out since 1988. It's mostly strain dependent as some strains do really well in or out, some both, some only in or only out. For example I hate floppy stems and any cultivars that exhibit floppy-ass stems and weak branching get nixed out of my outdoor selections. Leafy plants (calyx to leaf ratio) are a nightmare to trim so I watch that carefully with any "outdoor" strains I am working with and only select and proceed with the traits that I think work for me and what purpose I have in mind for that particular strain.
Good to know thanks for the info.
 

GreenTools

Well-Known Member
I dont think it means untested at all but that is my opinion from what I know and have heard. Bodhi lists strains as "Outdoor" that should be run outdoors (IN HIS OPINION). You can take your chances and run them indoors but be prepared to lolli and/or defoliate lowers and maybe even pick a few nanners off.

As far as what other breeders do/say/etc... you need to ask the other breeders.

I breed primarily for outdoors but have grown in and out since 1988. It's mostly strain dependent as some strains do really well in or out, some both, some only in or only out. For example I hate floppy stems and any cultivars that exhibit floppy-ass stems and weak branching get nixed out of my outdoor selections. Leafy plants (calyx to leaf ratio) are a nightmare to trim so I watch that carefully with any "outdoor" strains I am working with and only select and proceed with the traits that I think work for me and what purpose I have in mind for that particular strain.
I also look for the same traits as well as mold resistance, and only because local environment gets dicey every autumn....
 

thenasty1

Well-Known Member
sun ra, wk 8ish. coming down soon
the close up shot is the one that has stood out all along. shes thick as fuck, definitely going to win the yield category. sucks that its also the one that i found bananas on, but its probably going to at least get a trial run from clone. hopefully the couple of male flowers it threw were just a one off, because this pheno looks like its got what i need so far. the group did end up pollinated a bit. it doesnt look like mexibrick-tier seeded, but time will tell. post harvest pics coming relatively soon
20191118_201610 - Copy.jpg 20191118_201618 - Copy.jpg
 

dubekoms

Well-Known Member
sun ra, wk 8ish. coming down soon
the close up shot is the one that has stood out all along. shes thick as fuck, definitely going to win the yield category. sucks that its also the one that i found bananas on, but its probably going to at least get a trial run from clone. hopefully the couple of male flowers it threw were just a one off, because this pheno looks like its got what i need so far. the group did end up pollinated a bit. it doesnt look like mexibrick-tier seeded, but time will tell. post harvest pics coming relatively soon
View attachment 4423135 View attachment 4423137
Looks great, how is the aroma?
 

CopaGenetics

Well-Known Member
I also look for the same traits as well as mold resistance, and only because local environment gets dicey every autumn....
One of my favorite methods to test for mold resistance outdoors (other than actually seeing it in action before harvest lol) is to leave the stumps in the ground or if removed to place all of them in the same area and just watch and wait. The plants that are more mold resistant will hang in there green till the end... dry, no rot/mold. Most will show their weakness much sooner say maybe a week or two after chop. This has worked for me for decades and I try to tell any outdoor grower to test this out. it works. It all started 20+ years ago when a buddy of mine wanted a stump to make a pipe out of, after giving him 3 to choose from two rotted and he was left with no choice but the one that didnt. A lightbulb went off and I have tested this way successfully ever since.
 

GreenHighlander

Well-Known Member
I finally have some plants to share in here again :bigjoint:
These are some of the Gorilla Ghani clones I took from my outdoor plants. I have flowered #1 and #3 indoors but this will be the first time indoors for #2 .
They got transplanted and put into the flowering tent roughly 5 days ago.
IMG_5387.JPG
#1 from last year
DSCN7891.JPG
#3 from last year
DSCN7880.JPG

Cheers :)
 
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