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from the man himself, who has taught thousand upon thousand of people to grow, including myself.

1 post in this topic

Here are some

Frequently Asked Questions

from the ASK ED®Column,

now appearing in

Cannabis Culture magazine.

Marijuana Question?

Click here to

ASK ED!

REGENERATION

FRUIT FLIES

SEEDS IN CONTAINER

STAYING ALIVE

LIGHT TRACKS

AIR COOLING

POTASSIUM DEFICIENCY

KNOWLEDGE IS POWER

RIPENING TIME

INEFFICIENT FLUORESCENTS

NITROGEN DEFICIENCY

IDEAL FERTILIZER

EARLY FLOWERING

REFLOWERING

PASSIVE OR ACTIVE HYDRO

BUYING SEED

FRUIT FLAVORED BUDS

VARIETY PATTERNS

BEST STRAIN FOR BEGINNERS

REGENERATION

Dear Ed,

I am growing 15 plants from seed. I would like to regenerate the plants with the best buds into mother plants. How does regeneration work? Do the plants have to be a certain size?

El Toro,

Seattle, WA

Marijuana plants respond in a predictable manner to changes in the lighting regimen. Given 12 hours of uninterrupted darkness each day, the plants change from vegetative growth to flowering. Inversely, plants which have been under the flowering regimen of 12 hours of uninterrupted darkness each evening, can be forced back into vegetative cycle using continuous lighting.

To force plants from flowering to vegetative growth, cycled light is replaced by continuous lighting. When the ripe buds are pruned from the plant, some vegetation, the lower portion of the bud, is saved. New growth will emerge from this vegetation within a few weeks of forcing.

The plants can be any size, but they must retain some leaf matter to regenerate.


Just click at the top, the links work,

happy growing.

john

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About us

Strain Hunters is a series of documentaries aimed at informing the general public about the quest for the preservation of the cannabis plant in the form of particularly vulnerable landraces originating in the poorest areas of the planet.

Cannabis, one of the most ancient plants known to man, used in every civilisation all over the world for medicinal and recreational purposes, is facing a very real threat of extinction. One day these plants could be helpful in developing better medications for the sick and the suffering. We feel it is our duty to preserve as many cannabis landraces in our genetic database, and by breeding them into other well-studied medicinal strains for the sole purpose of scientific research.

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