Apr 1 2015, 17:27
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#1
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 19 Mitglied seit: 1.Apr 2015 Alter: 54 |
Hello,
First off I wish to apologize for not putting this post in the international section as I thought more people would see it here. I wish to show everyone pictures of my Salvia seedlings grown from seed that I hand pollinated. I think salvia enthusiasts, no matter what language will be interested... Cheers! Der Beitrag wurde bearbeitet von When am Apr 2 2015, 05:39 Uhr. |
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Apr 1 2015, 17:52
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#2
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Salvia Kenner Beiträge: 129 Mitglied seit: 8.Jun 2009 Alter: 39 |
Nice work When, can you tell us more information about your technique and your success rate?
I only saw 1 or 2 ppl on the internet who had success with the seed method so congratulations Der Beitrag wurde bearbeitet von tkoh am Apr 1 2015, 17:53 Uhr. |
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Apr 1 2015, 18:31
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#3
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 19 Mitglied seit: 1.Apr 2015 Alter: 54 |
QUOTE(tkoh @ Apr 1 2015, 16:52) Nice work When, can you tell us more information about your technique and your success rate? I only saw 1 or 2 ppl on the internet who had success with the seed method so congratulations Thanks tkoh, Quickly I can tell you the mother plant was grown indoors under natural light. I propagated 2 seeds, which both sprouted. I will have time later to go into greater detail |
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Apr 1 2015, 19:15
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#4
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Salvianaut Beiträge: 3,199 Mitglied seit: 19.Oct 2010 Alter: 49 Aus: Elsass (France), next City: Karlsruhe/Straßbourg |
Nice. Let's wait for the first salvia-typic leafs.
-------------------- angelogen bin ich erst, wenn ich es glaube...
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Apr 1 2015, 20:02
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#5
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Salvia Kenner Beiträge: 162 Mitglied seit: 3.Dec 2003 Aus: Österreich |
i wanted to try getting seeds...but up to now i didn´t tried
very nice work...congratulations -------------------- ::: Freiheit für Pflanzen ! :::
Alkohollegalität ist strange... |
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Apr 1 2015, 20:15
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#6
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Salvia Kenner Beiträge: 103 Mitglied seit: 20.May 2010 Alter: 37 |
Awesome,
i'll follow this one. Hope they will survive and spread over the world |
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Apr 1 2015, 21:45
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#7
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Salvianaut Beiträge: 1,196 Mitglied seit: 18.Sep 2013 Alter: 45 |
Nice. Please keep us updated.☺
Which strain is the mother plant? -------------------- “If the words 'life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness' don't include the right to experiment with your own consciousness, then the Declaration of Independence isn't worth the hemp it was written on.” -Terence McKenna
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Apr 3 2015, 00:12
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#8
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 19 Mitglied seit: 1.Apr 2015 Alter: 54 |
QUOTE(hand @ Apr 1 2015, 20:45) Thanks everyone, I'll share info and pictures as the plants hopefully thrive. I'm not sure which strain the mother plant is. Maybe I can get a positive identification from someone. I will post pictures later after I'm done work. This is a short background story ... I have recently sprouted 2 salvia Divinorum seeds obtained from hand pollination i did in the fall of 2014 She had a tough first couple of years. (The mother plant) I acquired 3, 2-3" clones which never really thrived even tho I did everything I could to get them acclimatized to a dry apartment. Frequent misting and humidity tents just resulted in disappointing growth. They grew to about 8" when the spider mites arrived. I tried everything from soap and water, insecticide soap, neem, a few forgotten commercial insecticides, and frequent trips to the shower to try and blast the little fuckers off. Then after months of this, and 3 sad looking plants later I made a solution of neem and capsicum extract in a last ditch effort to eradicate. I didn't expect any favorable results but I was desperate. After I treatment the 3 plants looked awful and near dead, but no mites!?!. I had mites on a papyrus plant in the same room and gave it the same treatment. A week later the papyrus looked fine and still no mites! It turned out that that one spraying wiped out all the mites(they never returned) but killed 2 of 3 salvia plants with the third looking near dead, basically a greenish brown stem with a few dried up leaves. Gave it a good soaking with water and put her in the corner to die. Maybe it was the right time of year because something woke her up and started growing like never before!. In a room with low humidity and no tent with no misting she started thriving, weird I thought. When fall came I noticed a change in the meristem, it was a flower starting reacting to the natural light period. She was never given any light at night. I hand pollinated for a few days with the flowers that fell on the floor. A few weeks later I notice a dark spot inside a flower...seeds!! 2 of them. About five months go by until I decide to plant the seeds, about 12 days ago. So here we are today 6 days since sprouting, I have 2 tiny miracles, healthy yet so fragile They are coming along nicely and are on 24hr watch lol QUOTE(tranquility @ Apr 1 2015, 19:02) I didn't think it was possible either Flowing mother http://www.salviasource.org/images/gallery/161805.jpg Mother today http://www.salviasource.org/images/gallery/161804.jpg Der Beitrag wurde bearbeitet von When am Apr 3 2015, 00:14 Uhr. |
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Werbung:
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#0
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Werbefachmann ;-) Beiträge: n Mitglied seit: 20.Dez 2006 Alter: 0 |
-------------------- Hinweis: Bitte die jeweilige Gesetzgebung in deinem Land beachten! "All advertising advertises advertising." ~ Marshall McLuhan |
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Apr 3 2015, 15:11
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#9
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 35 Mitglied seit: 22.Jun 2013 Alter: 33 |
awesome!
you don´t use natural light for the kids, do you? the perlite looks kinda burned. |
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Apr 3 2015, 15:36
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#10
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Salvia Kenner Beiträge: 103 Mitglied seit: 20.May 2010 Alter: 37 |
First things first, thanks a lot for sharing your experience with us.
I really appreciate that! Your story sounds dramatic and is maybe the worst nightmare for the most of us. Nice to see that this story takes an happy ending, even tho all seems lost. It's pretty taff and unusual to get seeds from SD without any help, except pollinating them by hand. Especially in the middle of europe. For this reason i would prefer to take a plant in a chamber with artifical light. Should this ever happen, i would share it in this community. Would you tell us on which place on earth this thing is happend? And did you put the seeds for the time of 5 months in a refrigerator or something? |
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Apr 3 2015, 23:03
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#11
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 19 Mitglied seit: 1.Apr 2015 Alter: 54 |
QUOTE(Gartenfreund @ Apr 3 2015, 14:11) Yes, actually all they're given is natural light but no direct sun. For the exception of 1 hour of cool sun at dawn yesterday. QUOTE(GrowUp @ Apr 3 2015, 14:36) First things first, thanks a lot for sharing your experience with us. I really appreciate that! Your story sounds dramatic and is maybe the worst nightmare for the most of us. Nice to see that this story takes an happy ending, even tho all seems lost. It's pretty taff and unusual to get seeds from SD without any help, except pollinating them by hand. Especially in the middle of europe. For this reason i would prefer to take a plant in a chamber with artifical light. Should this ever happen, i would share it in this community. Would you tell us on which place on earth this thing is happend? And did you put the seeds for the time of 5 months in a refrigerator or something? Sorry for being so dramatic, but I thought it would make better reading After my remaining salvia plant started flowering I thought I would hand pollinate some flowers even though the information I read said it wasn't possible, that made me want to try even harder. I never used a humidity tent, chamber or artificial light, I'm not saying you shouldn't use artificial light or extra humidity, but I am just writing what worked for me to produce seeds and seedlings. The mother plant followed the natural light cycle through the seasons and was never, never ever given light at night as she was in a room with no lights so no accidental light switch was turned on. No special storage was given to the seeds, just put in a 1"x1" zip bag and stored at room temp in the dark This is taking place in north eastern Ontario, Canada Der Beitrag wurde bearbeitet von When am Apr 3 2015, 23:28 Uhr. |
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Apr 3 2015, 23:51
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#12
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Salvia Kenner Beiträge: 103 Mitglied seit: 20.May 2010 Alter: 37 |
It was a good reading!, dont have to be sorry
I'm really interested in this topic. Can't wait to try it by myself again. And im looking forward to read and see more from your two little fellas |
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Apr 5 2015, 07:23
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#13
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 19 Mitglied seit: 1.Apr 2015 Alter: 54 |
Exciting news!!
One seedling is showing its first pair of true leaves. Der Beitrag wurde bearbeitet von When am Apr 5 2015, 07:25 Uhr. |
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Apr 5 2015, 15:12
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#14
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Salvianaut Beiträge: 1,196 Mitglied seit: 18.Sep 2013 Alter: 45 |
Nice. As yet they're looking exactly like Salvia splendens seedlings.
Der Beitrag wurde bearbeitet von hand am Apr 5 2015, 19:16 Uhr. -------------------- “If the words 'life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness' don't include the right to experiment with your own consciousness, then the Declaration of Independence isn't worth the hemp it was written on.” -Terence McKenna
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Apr 9 2015, 20:53
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#15
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Grünschnabel Beiträge: 19 Mitglied seit: 1.Apr 2015 Alter: 54 |
Day 13 pictures, they're coming along nicely. Slow but healthy
60x magnification of seedling leaves. |
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