Rust&Stardust
Member
loving this! youre such a happy guy your plant is bound to be happy as well!
Playing music lends a distinct forced complete vibrating motionSinging for 5 minutes adds Co2 into your grow room...
Playing music adds nothing.
I was thinking the exact same thing.There are no landrace New Guinea strains. Just ganja seeds brought in by expatriate hippies in the 70s. Even at that, it could be Acapulco gold or some other strain popular back then. If you are so inclined to believe this unlikely story.
Sounds to me like someone just having a laugh...
JD
Is that why all the biggest rainforests are surrounded by concert halls....?Playing music lends a distinct forced complete vibrating motion
that stimulates (plant growth) through sound energy.
I'm going to make some coffee, smoke a pinch of sweet, sweet Psicodelicia, grab my strat, and jam Run, Rudolph, Run with Chuck. Oh, and check my baby plants. They are so fragile at this young stage.
*subscribed for the Tribe*
Correct. Any energy imbued through the transport media of a plant (namely the vascular system) from a forced vibration source such as music and singing directly increases the kinetic energy, and conversely entropy, of the molecular symphony that is biological cell growth. The end result, undeniably proven with mathematics, is a kick-start in the Gibbs free energy available to catalyze biological chemical reactions, thus making growth easier on the plant.Playing music lends a distinct forced complete vibrating motion
that stimulates (plant growth) through sound energy.
Thats pretty radical dude. Id love to smoke some tribal herb. Are you doing a grow journal?Greetings
On one of my recent excursions deep into Papua New Guinea, i came across some tribesmen, who, like many of us, were artisans of cannabis cultivation. Long story short, i got high as hell from a big tree branch chalice and danced around for a day. I was fortunate enough to have obtained a small handful of seeds from their grove of chronic. Now, I am taking these majestic beauties indoors and fruiting them on the opposite side of the earth.
This is the first time i have taken truly wild, pure seed and attempted to domesticate it indoors. The strategy is as follows: Emulate the warm semi-equatorial atmosphere. No crazy light swapping or schedules, OG soil, compost tea, and sing to them for at least 5 minutes a day.
Anybody else tried out a New Guinean variety?
Pics to follow.
peace
Hazin'