Mohican
Well-Known Member
I use a strong dosage of BT on my whole yard when I first start to see signs of caterpillar damage. It worked great this year. Luck more than skill.
All of this lineage info is interesting but it still comes down this: how much do I like to smoke it, and how easy is it to grow.
So far the Scott's OG has been the fastest growing, most OG looking, most OG smelling, easiest trimming, best tasting medicine I have had the pleasure to work with.
I still have not tried the Tahoe cut so I do not have a good comparison. The TGA Jesus OG is definitely a frosty cherry smelling strain that I am still testing. My first taste wasn't as good as the Scott's but I wasn't in as much pain at the time either. I need to revisit this TGA offering and make a true evaluation with some of my fellow farmers and get their very biased opinions
In the mean time, the Scott's #2 in the shade, and in the ground, is still swelling and still getting frostier. Not a bit of fade in the leaves, and the trichs are still clear. It is a very interesting outcome. Maybe it will be a special plant like shade wrapper from Connecticut
As for whether a clone is the same as the original - I had a large plant that had different taste and smell on different colas. This makes me wonder whether the genes are expressed equally over the entire plant. If not, then clones taken from different parts of the plant may exhibit different traits.
When it comes down to it if a farmer loves his crop it shows and the love will be passed on to the fruit. Mr and Mrs RD really love what they are doing and it shows.
Cheers,
Mo
All of this lineage info is interesting but it still comes down this: how much do I like to smoke it, and how easy is it to grow.
So far the Scott's OG has been the fastest growing, most OG looking, most OG smelling, easiest trimming, best tasting medicine I have had the pleasure to work with.
I still have not tried the Tahoe cut so I do not have a good comparison. The TGA Jesus OG is definitely a frosty cherry smelling strain that I am still testing. My first taste wasn't as good as the Scott's but I wasn't in as much pain at the time either. I need to revisit this TGA offering and make a true evaluation with some of my fellow farmers and get their very biased opinions
In the mean time, the Scott's #2 in the shade, and in the ground, is still swelling and still getting frostier. Not a bit of fade in the leaves, and the trichs are still clear. It is a very interesting outcome. Maybe it will be a special plant like shade wrapper from Connecticut
As for whether a clone is the same as the original - I had a large plant that had different taste and smell on different colas. This makes me wonder whether the genes are expressed equally over the entire plant. If not, then clones taken from different parts of the plant may exhibit different traits.
When it comes down to it if a farmer loves his crop it shows and the love will be passed on to the fruit. Mr and Mrs RD really love what they are doing and it shows.
Cheers,
Mo