Continuing this from an attempted hijacking, lol.

Stinkyattic: You mentioned that most farmers wouldn't want seeds from 'S' generation femmed moms, so now I've got a couple of questions...

1) For years, I've been using aspirin to induce flowers on female1, and pollinating female2 with the resultant pollen. Is this the same? (flowers start showing too late for viable seeds on fem1, so I collect first few pollen flowers and harvest her, then paint the pollen on lower branches of fem2 which is a few weeks behind in maturity)
No noticible problems with the seeds, the plants, the taste, the buzz...but I do get mostly fem seedlings.

2) Does pollen from chemical induction (aspirin, gibrellic acid...)have different genetic end results than the enviornmental stress induction methods?

3) What's the down-side of femmed 'S' generation seeds?

Thanks...Rusty

edit: I did do a search, both here and online for answers, but found none.
Rusty Trichome Reviewed by Rusty Trichome on . feminized 'S' generations Continuing this from an attempted hijacking, lol. Stinkyattic: You mentioned that most farmers wouldn't want seeds from 'S' generation femmed moms, so now I've got a couple of questions... 1) For years, I've been using aspirin to induce flowers on female1, and pollinating female2 with the resultant pollen. Is this the same? (flowers start showing too late for viable seeds on fem1, so I collect first few pollen flowers and harvest her, then paint the pollen on lower branches of fem2 Rating: 5