Duplicating Wild Landrace Soils

Snafu1236

Well-Known Member
Landrace genetics are more about the climate of the area...ie temps, humidity levels, sun intensity/angles, daylight/dark hour times, etc.

Soil is soil, really..the plant manipulates soil according to its needs...the external environment is what you want to control when dealing with landrace genetics in order to mimic previous grows.

-Snafu
 

thetrickstergod

Well-Known Member
Really trying to understand how best to replicate landrace environments..I know I can control light/heat and humidity but it seems that soil composition is the big unknown...there is a rare landrace strain-Kalinga (northern Philippines) that I am interest in stabilizing and just wondering if soil replication would be useful.
 

Vindicated

Well-Known Member
Grow a dozen or so plants, let them go to seed, tend to those plants as you normally would, and let those go to seed. Keep repeating and after five generations you got your own land race strain that's properly acclimated to your region. Land race strains are very hardy but also have lots of variations. They naturally stabilize over time but will always have a high phenotype.
 

Snafu1236

Well-Known Member
Really trying to understand how best to replicate landrace environments..I know I can control light/heat and humidity but it seems that soil composition is the big unknown...there is a rare landrace strain-Kalinga (northern Philippines) that I am interest in stabilizing and just wondering if soil replication would be useful.
Again, soil does not matter. Landrace genetics may impart a flavor from the soil, but it is all about the environment the plant lives in, more than the nutrients it is pulling from the ground, when speaking of landrace genetics and the attempt to mimic the environment in which they grew.

-Snafu
 

Snafu1236

Well-Known Member
it seems you exclude soil from the environment, roots may disagree.
Ugh. I am only trying to outlay some good information here in dealing with landrace genetics.

I am not asking for a personal shot at me here, 'thetrickstergod'. It is easy to impart a flame on a thread without actually doing any research or reading to understand with what or whom you speak.

If you only read maybe even one of my journals, or even a post from one of my threads on here, you would realize that I consider the Soil Food Web one of the most important factors of organic growing and their environment in which they live is critical for root growth promotion.

However, it is ignorant and arrogant posts such as yours that is making RIU have a bad name.


You and your 23 posts can piss off.


-Snafu
 

Snafu1236

Well-Known Member
P.S. Soil/root environment should be moist, loaded with blended organic amendments, and thriving with microbiology. Anything other than that, the plant will suffer.

LANDRACE genetics will only suffer if the soil environment is not consistent. There is no 'magic silver bullet' of a soil amendment that imparts a specific quality to a plant, aside possibly taste.

So, if I go from London to Africa to the Hindu Kush region, all of those plants will require an according amount of HPK and micro-nutrients, along with the limiting factors of the environment. The qualities, the special traits, that are imparted to landrace genetics are from the formulation of the environment in which the plant adapts to over many years, it is not the plant roots adaptation to the soil over many years.

But don't listen to me, I do not care about the basis of plant life, the roots.

-Snafu

P.S. and yes, I am sensitive.
 
As with grapes when growing outdoors, the soil gives a certain flavor and body to what was grown in it. So if you want the full boat, in the replication. I'd say yes the native soil is important.
 

Snafu1236

Well-Known Member
As with grapes when growing outdoors, the soil gives a certain flavor and body to what was grown in it. So if you want the full boat, in the replication. I'd say yes the native soil is important.
Disagreed. Though it is a factor that plays a part for taste, my own opinion is that it is not nearly as much as a factor as the external environment above ground.

But again, I have only replicated five different landrace strain environments, so I am not as experienced as others.

However, most of the information you'll find on RIU will come from people who know how to type, but do not know how to grow...let alone landrace genetics.

-Snafu
 

Rising Moon

Well-Known Member
Soil is not "just soil". Quite a rediculous comment considering their are entire PHD programs dedicated to soil science.

There are literally thousands of variables in the physical and chemical make-up of soil.
 

BelieveInJesus

New Member
A real gardener is not a man who cultivates flowers; he is a man who cultivates the soil. Organic gardening is based on knowledge and techniques gathered over thousands of years, using sustainable and holistic approaches.

diggin that vindicated
 

Snafu1236

Well-Known Member
This thread has gotten interesting.

This will be my last post here. However, I have to cover this last topic, as I am a certified sommelier.

Someone pointed out soil for winemaking. They are absolutely correct! The soil/terroire is very important....because soil directly affect flavor and taste(something I have said since my first post on this thread).

This is because wine is made from a grapes, and the translocation of sucrose within the grape creates a sugar level that is desirable among wine drinkers....some are sweeter, some are bitter. Because of the composition of the soil, the soil will impart its own flavor profile into the grape and the corresponding sucrose levels, among other molecules.

But again, Cannabis and genus Vitis are two completely different plants, so I do not like to overly compare them too much.


Flame on, schoolyard botanists...you scared away probably one of the only people on this thread giving you accurate information!


-Snafu
 

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
Soil is not "just soil". Quite a rediculous comment considering their are entire PHD programs dedicated to soil science.

There are literally thousands of variables in the physical and chemical make-up of soil.
not that i disagree, but like i said. how deep do cannabis roots go? if we are talking about the top soil cannabis mostly lives in, there is no one consist ant composition anywhere in the word. if where talking about grapes, which can not be harvest for 2-3 years, than we are talking about deep root systems that reach deep soil, with consistent composition.
 
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