halibo this medusa F1 is a trial to see the advantages of this type of auto, but will be threated as the other siblings of her from another families 😈
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1
Week 1. Vegetation
10d ago
1/4
10 cm
Height
20 hrs
Light Schedule
23 °C
Day Air Temp
6.2
pH
No Smell
Smell
75 %
Air Humidity
20 °C
Solution Temp
21 °C
Substrate Temp
22 °C
Night Air Temp
20 liters
Pot Size
0.3 liters
Watering Volume
60 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 2
BoomBoom Spray
3 mll
Easy Bloom Booster Tablets
1 mll
halibo day5
she is growing as expected, i have given some boom boom spray from biotabs, which helps with some light N and good microbes to the plant to support the further lifecycle 💪
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2 comments
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2
Week 2. Vegetation
7d ago
1/5
11 cm
Height
20 hrs
Light Schedule
23 °C
Day Air Temp
6.2
pH
No Smell
Smell
73 %
Air Humidity
20 °C
Solution Temp
21 °C
Substrate Temp
22 °C
Night Air Temp
20 liters
Pot Size
0.4 liters
Watering Volume
60 cm
Lamp Distance
Nutrients 2
BoomBoom Spray
3 mll
Easy Bloom Booster Tablets
1 mll
halibo day8
she is feeling great herself in the environment and with the small amount of watering.
will place some fugures to add some fun to the photos 😁
@drakkon, thanks for your comment! i have checked your Medusa and great job with really detailed and helpful diary, a good example! i can see you like F1 strains and grown some types. why do you prefer them and what is the advantages as per your experience compared to normal autos? are they more predictables?
thanks and cheers!
@halibo, hello. I prefer the F1 hybrids because they exhibit greater uniformity than other strains, while also being hardy and vigorous. I was originally intrigued by RQS’s F1 line simply because of the Greek-myth names, which I love, so it was a good branding move by them. But, they do measure up in my opinion, at least with my limited experience. I’ve grown quite a few Northern Lights, for example (no diaries), and they vary significantly more than the F1s I’ve tried.
There’s a lot to read about how they do it online, at RQS, Dutch Passion, etc.
Short version is: 1st repeatedly inbreed two entirely different strains/lines, but each with certain traits you desire. Keep going until those strains are pretty consistent. All the inbreeding means you get the trait you want, but with that comes some lack of vigor or weaknesses (like overbred dog breeds having certain health issues).
Second, cross-breed one great individual from each of the two lines you just made. Now, the one generation of seeds resulting from that cross expresses the best (dominant) traits from both, while avoiding the weaknesses (recessive) of either. That’s what they call hybrid vigor.
Finally, one drawback is that when F1 hybrids themselves produce seeds, the next gen goes right back to having huge variety, so you can’t keep going and breeding them. The value is in just that one generation.
@drakkon, hello! many thanks for your great and clear answer. i have done some readings too and i see now the reason behind. i have seen on 420 fastbuds rf3 seeds, which are even pushed further on that breeding method and looks interesting too. about the name of the RQS F1s, indeed good choice :)
have a good one!
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