InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 22
Posts 6964
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 03/18/2015

Re: Wo post# 23815

Wednesday, 10/07/2015 4:49:55 PM

Wednesday, October 07, 2015 4:49:55 PM

Post# of 128669
yeah, I do cloning myself - realized immediately the value of tissue culture cloning - have a cooler or something with 60,000 plants growing - I have no idea how they do it, what methods or environment they need to grow - but it is going to be small, quick and energy efficient to be sure.

Their ability to quickly and effeciently take one phenotype, one actual plant and reproduce it 10s of thousands of times is really important.

Wondering if they can keep these cell cultures waiting, activate them when they want with a hormone treatment - can the tissue cultures be shipped? How long would it take to go from a tissue culture to a 'seedling' - Very interesting technology, glad to know we got a PHD teaching the boys how it is done, who knows what these people are going to cook up.

Laboratory testing combined with DNA Genetics methods of breeding, then you pass the result to cell tissue dude and he sends the clones over to Angus.

BANK

imagine all the metrics they could use when evaluating a phenotype with their laboratory, standardized procedures and systematic testing and documentation of environmental conditions, and they will have the financial and mathematical capability to take all the data and bring it on down to a few basic numbers - like cost per gram of THC extract per square ft per day per watt or some shit like that, and then further boil it all down to dollars and cents - they are going to bring cannabis cultivation into the 21st century. Best breeding program on the planet, and no genetic material will leave our facility alive to be reproduced.

Safe to say in a few years the very best cannabis in multiple categories. They can grow the very best buds, they can grow the most effecient high producing bud, they will have the best of it all, and no one will be able to keep up.

It reminds me of a story I read about this farmer in Ohio or somewhere that got into breeding soy very early on, he got systematic with it - he is a billionaire now that licenses his genetic material to Monsanto. It could be like that, once you get ahead of the game and you control the genetics people can't catch up - this one guy kinda owns soy bean production world-wide, f#$%ed huh?


Stinger: And if you screw up just this much, you'll be flying a cargo plane full of rubber dog shit out of Hong Kong!
Maverick: Yes, sir!