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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Crossing weed with strawberries...is it possible?

    It is always better to take the time and find the article you are referring to! Like this-

    High Times > A Florida Biochemist Designs a Citrus Tree with THC


    Otherwise, folks will dismiss you as just another dumb stoner kid who's just "blowing smoke", rather than someone who remembered an obscure bit of data! :thumbsup:


    And dang, I wish I had got some of those seeds! Nothing like fresh OJ in the morning!

    -Granny:hippy:
    Storm Crow Reviewed by Storm Crow on . Crossing weed with strawberries...is it possible? The title says it all..is it possible??? my friend says if you "cross clones of weed plant and strawberry plant and take seeds from both plants and grow them, cross them again etc...it will make strawberry nug which u can then throw a few into a blender and make a weed smoothie" although it is just high rambling, i think it could work to some extent... :stoned: Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Crossing weed with strawberries...is it possible?

    Quote Originally Posted by Aspire420
    Oh another thing...many flowering plants and herbs are crossed strand by strand. They are not crossed directly but the genetic strands are infused into the plant gradually. I really don't know that much about it but roses are hybrid in that manner. I mean have you seen all the different kinds of roses there are? It's amazing and just because people are so fascinated with them that they have taken time into crossing strains piece by piece.
    You mean genetic modification? DNA splicing? Roses are bred by old-school hybridization techniques- using sexual reproduction and a seed line. Grafting in roses has nothing to do with genetic manipulation; the rootstocks of hybrid rose varieties are typically weak and susceptible to nematodes. Therefore, the growing shoots of a commercially valuable hybrid will be grafted onto the rootstocks of either a very old (turn of the century) variety called Dr. Huey which is winter hardy to zone 4, or to a local scrub rose that happens to be impervious to the local pathogens and parasites. In New England, a good choice would be R. multiflora. This changes neither the genetics of the rootstock, nor of the scion; one of the maintenance issues with roses is the removal of suckers that the rootstock sometimes sends up and which are nothing mroe than the stems of the plant that it SHOULD have been growing on top, lol! They never show characteristics that combine traits of both. The DNA and RNA remains unchanged. The wide variety of colors and flower forms seen in the genus is the result of hundreds of years of mixing up named varieties through mating, and selecting for the ones that most clearly carry a novel characteristic.

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