Quote Originally Posted by Rusty Trichome
Good link, dill.
Although the plants look cool, I noticed a few of the posts through the pages mention that they 'almost got a normal yield', and that 'it didn't yield as much as I thought it would'... If anything I would have thoght the opposite. If more leaf area, more potential photosynthesis type of thing. But I personally have never noticed a difference.

:thumbsup:
I think I read somewhere in that thread that his highest yielding plant was a tri or quad, but he also had low producers compared to normal plants. I think his intentions are to breed for the tri and quad traits only. If he successfully does this he will then start selecting for other traits, including yield.

Not to threadjack but I'm trying to stabilize a strain of white widow that tops itself and its growth shoots top themselves. Yields from these plants have been surprising, nearly double their normal siblings. Out of 10 first generation seeds, 3 have exhibited this trait. I'm hoping that this means it'll be easy to stabilize. Too early to tell. And this is my first stab in the dark at selective breeding so I know I'll be making lots of mistakes. :-)

I agree that using chemicals is bad juju, but much can be learned from experiments such as this. Just have to keep the experimental stuff separate from everything else.

DH