Stark contrast.Its hard to take someone serious who only praise their own work without even sharing it? You mention and reference things that simply don't exist and then being angry when people point this out?
Without any proof to the pudding it's a one way communication to a dead end.
K. Thanks for that update.Thread closed.
Im glad that I took the time to read every post on this thread. I hope @8Rhizome8 comes back with some good pictures.Hey’ya there, folks!
Not sure how many of you know about the effects of spirulina on cannabis? It is quite remarkable, actually. My outdoor plants in the SF Bay area exhibited this really unique “spiral” of elongated flowers.
The world is your oyster!
The Hawaiian spirulina does the funniest thing! It literally causes your plants cola’s to skyrocket and "spiral".
Cannabis genus tend to want to “run” under the influence of spirulina. Tall lanky and again I don’t know what it is about it but my cola’s look like “spiraling spears”.
If that's the case you would see it in the plants around Chernobyl or places like that then where they plant hemp or cannabis as it accumulates that stuffIm laying in bed, with a very active imagination. Here is my hypothesis that might "sound" more believable.
The "non-edible" spirulina is loaded with heavy metals. If it is mixed into the soil, it will induce a Whorled Phyllotaxi mutation in your cannabis plant. The plant will not grow out of the Phyllotaxi mutation, as most plants commonly do. As a result of this unusual effect of the spirulina, the colas display a fascinating "spiraling" pattern. The "spiraling" is caused by the alternating nodes on the Whorled Phyllotaxis cannabis plant.
Below is a reference to the spiraling pattern that was observed on the mutated plant.
View attachment 5440003
Interesting. I didn't know that hemp is being used to essentially clean polluted soil.If that's the case you would see it in the plants around Chernobyl or places like that then where they plant hemp or cannabis as it accumulates that stuff
Yeah it takes it up and locks it away inside vaccoules as it's a accumulater plant its been used many places for this purposeInteresting. I didn't know that hemp is being used to essentially clean polluted soil.
I would be very cautious about generalizing this to the cannabis we use vs hemp, since hemp is mostly used for textiles and some industrial oils etc.....Found this reference @conor c . It seems the plant can still be used. I imagined that the plant would be full of toxins, making it unusable.
"The accumulation of anthropogenic heavy metals in soil is a major form of pollution. Such potentially toxic elements are nonbiodegradable and persist for many years as threats to human and environmental health. Traditional forms of remediation are costly and potentially damaging to the land. An alternative strategy is phytoremediation, where plants are used to capture metals from the environment. Industrial hemp (Cannabis sativa) is a promising candidate for phytoremediation. Hemp has deep roots and is tolerant to the accumulation of different metals. In addition, the crop biomass has many potential commercial uses after harvesting is completed. Furthermore, the recent availability of an annotated genome sequence provides a powerful tool for the bioengineering of C. sativa for better phytoremediation."
That makes way more sense. Definitely nothing I would want to ingest in any form. Then again, we ingest all types of toxins every day...I would be very cautious about generalizing this to the cannabis we use vs hemp, since hemp is mostly used for textiles and some industrial oils etc.....
Do we? You know your poison by it's dose.That makes way more sense. Definitely nothing I would want to ingest in any form. Then again, we ingest all types of toxins every day...