OMG LMFAO! But it points out why I do journals, where I can delete idiots, but then I would not have seen your awesome replyGet back to your "computer monitor clone warmer" or your xbox,or whatever you kids do while dreaming of producing marijuana for the masses.
are you culturing? please share some experiences, like wacky flowering times, or homemade additives, or something. nobody has time to cater to your negativity in this forum, until they get out of school, maybe at 3pm. everyone has read your posts thusfar, and must say, not so impressed by your information. . If you're so sure about these foundations of yours, why are you here taunting peolple with real life experiences.
If you are genuinely interested in my bio lumi mj plant, PLACE A BID NOW, public or private.
I will not give you these specific answers, as I might be here just to sell something, remember?
fyi, everyday, when each of us clones,or cultures, we are genetically modifying plant material, albeit near impossible on an Xbox warming plate, or a desk light for illumination.
PICS or GTFO wolfzen, really. we dont read words well, so if you feel the need to type more, just dont! and for the record, I Do think your mom is hot !
OMG LMFAO! But it points out why I do journals, where I can delete idiots, but then I would not have seen your awesome reply
ok, to settle this for you;Making a plant glow requires genetic engineering methods, knowledge and equipment. Tissue culturing is not genetic engineering. Why do you keep implying otherwise?
You haven't had any success that you've shown nor do you have enough knowledge to discuss your claims without getting upset by direct questions. Again, tissue culturing doesn't alter DNA or manipulate DNA no matter how obtuse you want to get about it. Tissue culturing is simply culturing tissue in a media.ok, to settle this for you;
humans have been tampering with genetics for centuries. selective harvesting,hand pollinating or cross pollinating, or inducing mutants, with mutated, genes, that may have been engineered by a plethora of bacteria/virus at many different stages in growth, engineered by combining its own dna, with the hosts' dna, creating recombinant dna. this is done with great success in my lab now, and many other home labs. yes, more knowledge than you are willing to accept, or posess, is necessary to perform these small miracles.
So, you see, just because we may not have created(engineered) genetic material, does not mean that we are not intentionally culturing it, harnessing it, selecting it, breeding it, and combining it with other dna, becoming the final engineer. Tissue culture is a tool for genetic engineering. genetic engineering takes place in tissue culture. genes may be altered during your sloppy clone cutting/warming practices.
I know this is rhetoric for you, since you've already read the book I've suggested, perhaps a reread is in order. This information is near the beginning, before the words get bigger.