Hello, fellow auto aficionados!
My first post here. Been lurking since the site launched. Lots of knowledge and inspiring grows on this forum!.
Until now I've only pollen chucked autos and grown cheap photos with manageable indica-leaning size.
Now I will try to breed my own Cambodian landrace auto for both keeping indoors and developing something that will succeed outdoors in my northern humid climate at 60N.
I have just started a thread on this on icm**, but I would like to share and benefit from the feedback you auto wizards can give!
My plan is breeding a Cambodian landrace with ruderalis, repeated backcrossing to minimize the rudi gene pool and also keep it as geographically pure as possible.
I have read here and elsewhere that backcrossing is a tried and tested method to shift the gene pool towards one of the parents, in my case the Cambodian mother.
I plan on selecting some of the few f2s that autoflower and backcross to the mom, then repeating this two or three times, and then breed down to full auto f3 or f4.
This way I hope the auto hybrid contains as little rudi genes as possible. I have seen several suggestions to first breed down to full auto and then repeat the whole process, but with several repetitions I though I could save time by backcrossing from f2 instead of f4.
This could save me many months..
I don't know how well this will work, and I will not have time and space to do a lot of test crossing and pheno selection, so I will just follow the procedure necessary to get an auto version of the Cambodian landrace and be content with what I end up with phenowise. Then later over the future years I can expand on the method.
I don't want to cross the cambodian photo with a modern potent auto hybrid for this very project. I guess that the modern auto is such a mix of many strains that it would leave my hybrid less pure?
My romantic idea is that crossing with only a ruderalis result in purest hybrid, even though it will leave the hybrid less potent. If there existed a cambodian ruderalis, this would be the perfect start.
Later on I will of course cross the cambodian photo or one of its offspring with a Mephisto strain, or one of the gorilla cookie bruce banner gelato skittle thin mint wedding cake autos on the market. That would leave the hybrid a lot more potent, but I wouldn't be able to consider it a Cambodian auto.
A few questions.
1 : Do you know of any good alternative to the Siberian ruderalis that I plan on using? The rudi is tall with a sativa structure, from Khalifa/rsc.
2: Is there any difference in using auto pollen from f2 compared to f3 or f4 generation? To my knowledge, auto gene-wise they are the same, provided there are only two alleles that govern the autoflowering trait.
3: Are there many differences between mexican, russian and other ruderalis strains, potency-wise? The first autos like lowryder were weak. the newer hybrids are potent. Is this because a better ruderalis is used, or is the higher potency a result of the constant crossing with other photos/auto hybrids? How much of the evolution of autos comes from better ruderalis genetics specifically?
Someone said on another forum that when the description of a new auto hybrid says for example White widow crossed with ruderalis, this often is not true. It should have said WW crossed with Magnum, or AK auto.
Thanks for your time!
My first post here. Been lurking since the site launched. Lots of knowledge and inspiring grows on this forum!.
Until now I've only pollen chucked autos and grown cheap photos with manageable indica-leaning size.
Now I will try to breed my own Cambodian landrace auto for both keeping indoors and developing something that will succeed outdoors in my northern humid climate at 60N.
I have just started a thread on this on icm**, but I would like to share and benefit from the feedback you auto wizards can give!
My plan is breeding a Cambodian landrace with ruderalis, repeated backcrossing to minimize the rudi gene pool and also keep it as geographically pure as possible.
I have read here and elsewhere that backcrossing is a tried and tested method to shift the gene pool towards one of the parents, in my case the Cambodian mother.
I plan on selecting some of the few f2s that autoflower and backcross to the mom, then repeating this two or three times, and then breed down to full auto f3 or f4.
This way I hope the auto hybrid contains as little rudi genes as possible. I have seen several suggestions to first breed down to full auto and then repeat the whole process, but with several repetitions I though I could save time by backcrossing from f2 instead of f4.
This could save me many months..
I don't know how well this will work, and I will not have time and space to do a lot of test crossing and pheno selection, so I will just follow the procedure necessary to get an auto version of the Cambodian landrace and be content with what I end up with phenowise. Then later over the future years I can expand on the method.
I don't want to cross the cambodian photo with a modern potent auto hybrid for this very project. I guess that the modern auto is such a mix of many strains that it would leave my hybrid less pure?
My romantic idea is that crossing with only a ruderalis result in purest hybrid, even though it will leave the hybrid less potent. If there existed a cambodian ruderalis, this would be the perfect start.
Later on I will of course cross the cambodian photo or one of its offspring with a Mephisto strain, or one of the gorilla cookie bruce banner gelato skittle thin mint wedding cake autos on the market. That would leave the hybrid a lot more potent, but I wouldn't be able to consider it a Cambodian auto.
A few questions.
1 : Do you know of any good alternative to the Siberian ruderalis that I plan on using? The rudi is tall with a sativa structure, from Khalifa/rsc.
2: Is there any difference in using auto pollen from f2 compared to f3 or f4 generation? To my knowledge, auto gene-wise they are the same, provided there are only two alleles that govern the autoflowering trait.
3: Are there many differences between mexican, russian and other ruderalis strains, potency-wise? The first autos like lowryder were weak. the newer hybrids are potent. Is this because a better ruderalis is used, or is the higher potency a result of the constant crossing with other photos/auto hybrids? How much of the evolution of autos comes from better ruderalis genetics specifically?
Someone said on another forum that when the description of a new auto hybrid says for example White widow crossed with ruderalis, this often is not true. It should have said WW crossed with Magnum, or AK auto.
Thanks for your time!