Grapefruit Diesel, Venom Outdoors 45 ° N Canada

XxchemoxX

Active Member
Hello fellow farmers, this year i am going to be getting a late start, so the goal of this grow is pure quality not quantity... I will be growing Next Generation's Grapefruit Diesel, as well as a strain called Venom. Venom ( Romulan x Burmese ) is produced by a Canadian company called Leprechaun Seed Co, found solely on Hemp Depot. However i ordered my beans late an due to bad weather i haven't been able to start them.. Yeah you heard me, im starting them outside. I will germ em inside but then there each getting started under 2 litre pepsi bottles. It sounds ghetto and is ghetto but its just till theyre established. Once big enough they'll be transplanted into holes filled with organicare pellets and wtv amendments i decide to add.. Grapefruit Diesel x 10 feminized Venom x 20 reg
 
Hey I'm curious how those turned out, I'm looking for an EXTREMELY mold resistant strain a few latitude degrees north of you, and the grapefruit diesel sounds like a strain I wouldn't mind puffin on, as I'm a massive fan of sour diesel.

How'd it turn out? At least, did mold become an issue?
 
Hey I'm curious how those turned out, I'm looking for an EXTREMELY mold resistant strain a few latitude degrees north of you, and the grapefruit diesel sounds like a strain I wouldn't mind puffin on, as I'm a massive fan of sour diesel.

How'd it turn out? At least, did mold become an issue?
No sour in the gfd, its somas nyc diesel x grapefruit, and has absolutely no diesel smell/taste... Maybe Im mistaken but it shouldnt be able to finish up there either bud...
Trust in the great white shark ive grown it @ 50N in a swamp no problems. Low tolerance build up too you can puff on it all winter..
 
I've heard of that strain! Yeah if you grew that shit in a swamp, I should be golden then. Where I'm looking at is pretty damn dry during the summer, at least it feels extremely dry, and thats the only reason I can tolerate the occasional 100 degree high, but according to weather data I've looked at, its 75% RH there during flowering! So I'm sketched. The hippies used to grow up there though during the 60's, and if they did it for very long and got worthwhile yields, they had to of either had a really hood strain, or the conditions were simply not that bad.

But yeah thanks dude Ill look into that strain.
 
That sounds like the same climate, you should do great with white shark. I think the Indian genetics help us in the Canadian summer because of how muggy and dry it is there. Good luck bud
 

petert

Well-Known Member
Hello fellow farmers, this year i am going to be getting a late start, so the goal of this grow is pure quality not quantity... I will be growing Next Generation's Grapefruit Diesel, as well as a strain called Venom. Venom ( Romulan x Burmese ) is produced by a Canadian company called Leprechaun Seed Co, found solely on Hemp Depot. However i ordered my beans late an due to bad weather i haven't been able to start them.. Yeah you heard me, im starting them outside. I will germ em inside but then there each getting started under 2 litre pepsi bottles. It sounds ghetto and is ghetto but its just till theyre established. Once big enough they'll be transplanted into holes filled with organicare pellets and wtv amendments i decide to add.. Grapefruit Diesel x 10 feminized Venom x 20 reg
Not to be picky..But I'm basically at 45 N and I'm in Oregon. Where in Canada is on the 45th Parallel?
 
Im at the 42nd parallel usa and i have good luck with TNR by kc brains. excellent underated strain. Make sure you get them in the breeder pack. Very heavy harvest and mold resistance and a very unique Thai taste. Very greasy long spears. If i were at the 50th parallel or above I would go with an earlier finishing strain such as early pearl or early skunk. I cant stress enough the importance of seed selection when growing outdoors. Has anyone else had success with kc brains outdoor strains? TNR is a massive outdoor yeilder wit five pound+ harvests coming from plants started indoors in march and harvested early october.
 
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