Candybeast
Active Member
I agree with that for sure.
Depends on what you mean with succes. I get most whorlers in a very bushy afghanica (ICE cross) and least in a very stretchy almost hemp like sativa. not sure if there is a link.What strains have you had success with may I ask, sativies
There are so many ways the hormone regulation is affected and it can be most genetic or mostly environment (not necessarily stressful) but yes usually a combination.I would think it would have to have the genetics first, and then it could be brought out by stressing or I'm sure it happens on its own.
Sativied tells it better than i can but yes i agree here and was what it seems like. So many growers seem eager to find genetic mutations that i dont think they will ever find let alone breed on into viable seeds and strains.Depends on what you mean with succes. I get most whorlers in a very bushy afghanica (ICE cross) and least in a very stretchy almost hemp like sativa. not sure if there is a link.
There are so many ways the hormone regulation is affected and it can be most genetic or mostly environment (not necessarily stressful) but yes usually a combination.
Check out my current journal . It's in my profile. I'll set one up for these plants if you want to follow. I'll do a side by side. Since one is doing it and one is not.Sativied tells it better than i can but yes i agree here and was what it seems like. So many growers seem eager to find genetic mutations that i dont think they will ever find let alone breed on into viable seeds and strains.
I feel like most if not everything has been covered and mucho Rep+++ to Satieved, if i ever get a whorler (love that word) i will certainly consider trying to get better buds of it but thesedays im lucky if i get much past normal plants.
A very interesting thread and discussion, lets see how your plant turns out Candy and please link me up once its grown more, quite like these subjects
I wouldn't consider that a more true whorler but it certainly would be what I call an early whorler (assuming it whorles, which is usually the case) and provide the main benefit during veg. The whorlers from tricots often grow out of it after several nodes and/or whorl only on the main stem. They are sort of forced to whorl, inevitable because of the three cotyledons and the hofmeister rule (the new set of leaves will be in between the previous). The ideal would be a combination of such whorlers and mine. In that case it can always be topped after just two nodes (to get six colas) and branches and thus clones will carry the trait on.Classic detailed explanation and some great insight as always @Sativied +rep. From the first part of your explanation sounds like there's is a greater chance (not guarantee) of getting a true "whorler" from these triploids, but not all will necessarily become whorlers. Only one's I've seen have been in your thread, would be cool to get one to grow out sometime.
Ok thanks, will keep a close eye on this next one coming up to see what it does. Haven't had a female yet, hoping that second one is to see where it goes.I wouldn't consider that a more true whorler but it certainly would be what I call an early whorler (assuming it whorles, which is usually the case) and provide the main benefit during veg. The whorlers from tricots often grow out of it after several nodes and/or whorl only on the main stem. They are sort of forced to whorl, inevitable because of the three cotyledons and the hofmeister rule (the new set of leaves will be in between the previous). The ideal would be a combination of such whorlers and mine. In that case it can always be topped after just two nodes (to get six colas) and branches and thus clones will carry the trait on.
Weve had some long conversations as to the cause of tricots on a few threads recently ranging from rna damage, pathogens, stress etc etc as the seed was forrming. Wiki has a link under fasciation that a few have quoted from -I wouldn't consider that a more true whorler but it certainly would be what I call an early whorler (assuming it whorles, which is usually the case) and provide the main benefit during veg. The whorlers from tricots often grow out of it after several nodes and/or whorl only on the main stem. They are sort of forced to whorl, inevitable because of the three cotyledons and the hofmeister rule (the new set of leaves will be in between the previous). The ideal would be a combination of such whorlers and mine. In that case it can always be topped after just two nodes (to get six colas) and branches and thus clones will carry the trait on.
Interesting, if I were seeing this across different strains/seedlings, I'd be looking at a source of potential infection or hormonal issue. If it's happening on the same strain seedlings when other strains/seedlings were in the same environment I'd lean towards the mutation factor.Weve had some long conversations as to the cause of tricots on a few threads recently ranging from rna damage, pathogens, stress etc etc as the seed was forrming. Wiki has a link under fasciation that a few have quoted from -
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciation
This isn't Fasciation that I have going on. Though I would love to catch an example of it in my garden. Just to get the experience. I know growers who love the flat ,Hong Kong style bids they produce.Weve had some long conversations as to the cause of tricots on a few threads recently ranging from rna damage, pathogens, stress etc etc as the seed was forrming. Wiki has a link under fasciation that a few have quoted from -
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciation
By success, I mean a plan that stood up to its name. No diminished yield, same potency as other samples of strain, no sexing issues, ect.Depends on what you mean with succes. I get most whorlers in a very bushy afghanica (ICE cross) and least in a very stretchy almost hemp like sativa. not sure if there is a link.
There are so many ways the hormone regulation is affected and it can be most genetic or mostly environment (not necessarily stressful) but yes usually a combination.
I had none of those issues with an indica dom, a sativa dom, and a skunk cross, and cannalope haze itself, except that the indica dom (ICE x CH) actually does produce hermies. So do some of the sisters of the mom so I'm pretty sure it's not from the whorling dad.By success, I mean a plan that stood up to its name. No diminished yield, same potency as other samples of strain, no sexing issues, ect.
Sorry dude i use the wiki link as a possible means to describe how a seed would have three cotyledons without it being genetically caused. Wether or wether not buds are fasciated its certainly possible for somthing like rna damage to cause a tri leafed seedling (tricot). I have never found much evidence to support a genetic trait but plenty to suggest an underlying factor that would manipulate the genetics. A lot of this seems to fit well with the observations made that tricots can quite easily revert back to normal growth. I would assume if it was purely genetic this tri leafed trait would be easily breedable and we would see a lot of new interesting strains.This isn't Fasciation that I have going on. Though I would love to catch an example of it in my garden. Just to get the experience. I know growers who love the flat ,Hong Kong style bids they produce.
I have nothing against big companies, especially if they do the work instead of just making fem seeds with other breeder's work and popular clones. They are good for growing because they know where and from who to source the good stuff, I just wouldn't choose them for breeding, which has nothing to do with my dislike for them. I wouldn't ditch any plants with desirable traits from dinafem if I happened to have one though.Yo thanks for all the tips brother. I'm just starting to learn the basics of breeding. Right now all I am doing is selecting clone's to keep. Which I will eventually cross with some seeds I made. Yeah I realize Dinafem gets some bad rep. People like to hate on the big companies and I don't blame them. But being how limited I am on space.4x4 flower tent and 32"-32" veg tent. I wanted to start with feminized seeds. I don't trust clone's from the dispensaries. Had bad luck my first time and got mites. So far Dinafem has impressed me. But I haven't smoked it yet. My current grow is Dinachem and Kush n Cheese. Granted they're All different pheno but they're pretty homogeneous. IMO. I know there is stronger genetics out there. But as far as feminized seeds go. I trust Dinafem. Anyway. So you saying if I do choose a whorled to put into my line. Select for other traits first. And then cross the whorled with a stable non whorled?
Yes, though ideally after you confirmed if and how it inherits. Either cross out or self for testing, or breed with something similar so you stablize the whorler line a bit too (which if anything will result in more uniform plants once you use it to cross). I assume you don't have space for a thousand plants, so with limited plant count it is harder to find plants that whorl and have all the other best traits in the cross. E.g. a non-whorler could be a higher yielder or taste better or finish a week sooner and then by selecting a whorler you don't select for the best of other traits. The non-whorling line doesn't have to be related or something you work on first, it can be something like your favorite kush or something close to what you got. If you breed in you will (given a limited plant count) typically end up with something lesser than the original parents and then the only way to fix it is crossing out, or with a different line from the same strain.Anyway. So you saying if I do choose a whorled to put into my line. Select for other traits first. And then cross the whorled with a stable non whorled?