kagbeni

Accidental Regeneration

4 posts in this topic

I started a crop of DNA genetics Chocollope Kush about the beginning of October last year, harvested it in early Jan this year, shortly before my winter break (2 months in Africa) one plant was left under a skylight with a few popcorn buds remaining. I was surprised to find new growth on this plant when I returned. In 2 months it had endured no water, very cold temperatures and very little light. I decided to leave it where it was giving it water and small amounts of fertilizer thinking it might be good for some cuttings. it grew big and about a month ago started to flower. A few days ago I decided to pop it in a tent with some of it's offspring to see if I could get it to produce decent buds instead of the fluffy ones it was growing. I had to bend it quite a bit to fit it in the tent and here it is, the 3 buds in the foreground belong to one of it's offspring.

post-31900-0-32574700-1379244514.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

LoL. That is cool when that happens. I strip of small budsites 2 weeks into flower. A couple of weeks later new shoots appear and they normally push through to the new grow season.

Always good if the bud was decent

1 person likes this

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Re-vegging hey?! Nice :)

Def. wanna get around to that at some point :D

+ Chocolope Kush, mmmmmm :D

Bless

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

hehe nice to come back home and find this ;) I actually did this last year on a plant outdoor (leaving a piece of popcorn on the lower part, and never went back to see her, maybe there is a huge mmonster there now haha ;)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!


Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.


Sign In Now

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.

Social Network

Add us on social networks