hairy balls???

Brick Top

New Member
so what you all are saying is that if i leave the hermi in with the ladies he/she will pollinate them and the seeds that come out of that breeding will be mostly female but those females will have a greater chance of turning into hermis if they become stressed.
I would not say that every plant would turn, but at least a goodly percentage of them will not need any stress to turn hermie.
 

mistyriffs

Well-Known Member
Even when making feminized seeds the plants forced to turn, by using colloidal silver or by rodelization, are not that female plants that are pollinated and used to make feminized seeds. Those females, just like a hermie, have been stressed, they have been abused, and if used to make seeds they too will pass on hermie genetics.

The pollen from females where colloidal silver or rodelization have been used to force them to produce male sexual organs, bananas, is collected and used to pollinate a different crop of females. Even then some hermie tendencies can be, and are, passed on. That is why there are so many hermies from feminized seeds. But by using the pollen to pollinate females that are not stressed, that were not abused, it minimizes the passing on of hermie traits as much as is possible.
understood. and have recently been looking into the whole process because it intrigues me. by using the two main methods, it seems, you can reduce and outweigh the possibility of growing a hemp plant versus a sinsemilla. there seems to (and due to the market) has to be a high rate of success based on these techniques.
 

mccumcumber

Well-Known Member
They will be all male seeds with the potential to hermy

Edit: Come on guys think a second about your answers. It was a male FIRST once it switched to 12/12 that means that the pollen pods on it have the XY trait and so do the buds because they are coming off of a MALE, so the seeds will be guaranteed to be male.
 
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