ROBINBANKS
New Member
I know dude am just baked and pissing about with boredom.That info is a bit old and not entirely accurate you don't go by the hairs.
I know dude am just baked and pissing about with boredom.That info is a bit old and not entirely accurate you don't go by the hairs.
We used to get "Thai Sticks", they were just several little "budlets", wrapped up on a short piece of "bamboo splinter", tied together with a long thread of hemp fiber. It looked something like a real skinny "Corn Dog", made out of marijuana.How would you go about smoking that? I thought opium and weed were smoked in completely different ways.
Plants cannot be cloned indefinitly- they take on the maturity of the mother! And just like that hot college lady I adore down the street, she's only ripe for so long. I've cloned the same genes for 6 harvest, and on the 6th it didn't even look like a normal plant. Weird leaves, odd internodal growth, and crazy bud structure! I don't think I could have even gotten another harvest.
Also you can not veg forever! I left a mother in 24 hrs for close to 7 months and it just started flowering. Ended up being a heavy yielder- but could not have continued to veg, its not natural. They have instincts!
As for THC- do a youtube search for "marijuana man" and "THC percentages". CC's marijuna man breaks it down, explains how they get the percentages, and what they really mean. But as stated earlier the numbers are somewhat nebulous. Especially when your in ranges over 20percent- at that point, its gonna get you blown out, and the ranges of CBD and CBN will have a greater effect on the overall high.
actually notIt means your on here 24/7 .. take a break... lol
lol holy shit been here since last month and have over 2000 postsactually not
cuz i havent had this award in forever
by forever i mean 2 weeks
mad people have 100% activity
like kaleo
i dont know much about hash but can you put it on a joint? say if the joint was 20%thc then u put 50% thc hash on it you would have 70%thc.. just a thoughtHash isn't "marijuana"; it's just the trichs, so you can't really go by that.
Not sure I can even count the number of times I've been in this debate before. I don't keep mother plants. I do exactly the process you described of cloning the original from seed then cloning that clone, then cloning that clone, then cloning that clone, etc etc. I have a strain I have been doing this with for two years. 24 times a clone of a clone and it is exactly the same as it ever was. I have other strains that I'm 15+ deep in. It isn't like a photocopy of a photocopy. I don't dispute the experience you had but I would bet a $million it was due to another cause.Plants cannot be cloned indefinitly- they take on the maturity of the mother! And just like that hot college lady I adore down the street, she's only ripe for so long. I've cloned the same genes for 6 harvest, and on the 6th it didn't even look like a normal plant. Weird leaves, odd internodal growth, and crazy bud structure! I don't think I could have even gotten another harvest.
lol @ award .. your activity is 100% = U on here 24/7 .. i bet RIU is your home page.. lol .. is all loveactually not
cuz i havent had this award in forever
by forever i mean 2 weeks
mad people have 100% activity
like kaleo
Marijuana potency reached its highest recorded level in 2006, most likely attributable to improvements in outdoor and indoor cultivation methods. The University of Mississippi Potency Monitoring Project data for 2006 indicate that the average THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol)--the psychoactive chemical in marijuana--level in tested samples of marijuana increased to the highest-ever recorded level since the project's inception in 1975. According to project data, the average THC content of all tested marijuana samples nationwide increased to 8.77 percent in 2006, nearly doubling since 1996 (4.50%) (see Chart 3). Most of the marijuana available in the United States is lower-potency, commercial-grade marijuana produced in Mexico; however, the national average potency of marijuana appears to be increasing because of a rising prevalence in domestic drug markets of high-potency marijuana that is generally produced in Canada and the United States through improved and highly efficient outdoor and indoor cultivation methods. Independent growers--and, increasingly, criminal groups and DTOs--operating in Canada and the United States use advanced equipment and cultivation methods to produce a higher-potency crop, including using cloned starter plants and high-nutrient fertilizers. For example, indoor grow operations recently discovered in the Atlanta area (see text box) yielded marijuana with a THC content of over 18 percent.so i was talking to my room mate and he was telling me some stories about amsterdam. most of it sounded like bull shit. the next thing you know he was talking about some 30 year old red hair plant. that made me laugh a lil because if that were possible it would have had to b cloned each year...now correct me if im wrong. then he starts talking about the weed he smoked most of it was believable untill he starts talking about thc levels and how he smoked weed with 52% - 60% thc. I started to laugh my ass off and then we got in to a heated arguement he just would not let up about it. i sad the highest levels reached were 27% thc so i googled it and the highest i found was 29%............ i would like to know what every one thinks about it. and allso he sad the 30 year old plant wasent cloned because thay loose potentcy each year. is any of that possible....
So many problems with this, first Mississippi? What the fuck do they know. Second it is 2 years old. 3rd they only found weed up to 8.77%, thats shit.Marijuana potency reached its highest recorded level in 2006, most likely attributable to improvements in outdoor and indoor cultivation methods. The University of Mississippi Potency Monitoring Project data for 2006 indicate that the average THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol)--the psychoactive chemical in marijuana--level in tested samples of marijuana increased to the highest-ever recorded level since the project's inception in 1975. According to project data, the average THC content of all tested marijuana samples nationwide increased to 8.77 percent in 2006, nearly doubling since 1996 (4.50%) (see Chart 3). Most of the marijuana available in the United States is lower-potency, commercial-grade marijuana produced in Mexico; however, the national average potency of marijuana appears to be increasing because of a rising prevalence in domestic drug markets of high-potency marijuana that is generally produced in Canada and the United States through improved and highly efficient outdoor and indoor cultivation methods. Independent growers--and, increasingly, criminal groups and DTOs--operating in Canada and the United States use advanced equipment and cultivation methods to produce a higher-potency crop, including using cloned starter plants and high-nutrient fertilizers. For example, indoor grow operations recently discovered in the Atlanta area (see text box) yielded marijuana with a THC content of over 18 percent.