audiohi
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Are you still working on this project oxanaca?
Will you also actually be doing it, as in some sort of log?I'll be posting in this thread and we'll see how it goes.
I was actually going to update this last night believe it or not.I'm gonna jump in here, maybe wake this thread up with my opening post.
On Tissue Culture and Microprobagation in general
If you like the planttc kit, go ahead and get it. I think it's a good single source for starting materials you're gonna need. A little pricey, but good for lazy stoners 'cause it's all in one box. Just know that the kit alone will not get you producing clones in culture.
You're gonna have to do a bunch of self education. If you already have a technical or science education then great, you're ready to go. If not, you will have additional reading to do. I've noticed that even in the Overgrow era, which got us to this point, people that have successfully learned this technique are keeping quiet about the finer details.
(Ya hear me skunkpharm?)
I'll be posting in this thread and we'll see how it goes. If you're parts of the group waiting for good info, here is the major resource;
Most of the research has been done at the University of Mississippi by a guy named
Suman Chandra. All of this work has been published in the relevant peer reviewed journals. Some is freely available as PDF's, some of it in books by same author, some of it you just have to buy. I'll bet someone condenses it in a more readable, un-prosecutable form before to long ;)
I've seen some people opine that these techniques are not that productive, are hard to learn, don't really work, and so on.
While some of that might be true, don't doubt the ability of these new techniques to massively multiply your source stock well beyond what simple cloning could ever do, reawaken tired genes, and protect your precious genotype for the long term..
I bookmarked a couple of links a while ago, not sure if they are still current but surely some of the info is:
Wow thats interesting, ill have to look into those. I think eventually I want to spend some time learning about fish, coral. And the science behind that environment. I think it would open my eyes, and be bring me one step closer to becoming a master cannabis growerWould methylene blue or malachite green have a place here? In fishkeeping, fish eggs are stained with malachite blue for two reasons--help show which eggs are not viable (they'll stain blue if they're inviable) AND as an antifungal. It's also used in surgeries where the surgeon needs to easily see what tissue is infected.