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What type of plant could this be? It has the same shape of a marijuana leaf, except that it only has 3 blades on its leaves. The leaves smell pretty heady, almost like kush leaves. I'll post pics later.
I'm assuming you found it outdoors, or was it some bag-seed that was planted out there?
It would depend on your general location, but if its becoming late summer where you are, the days should be getting shorter and the plant will pick up on this and begin flowering... If that is the case, it probably has a couple months left. I'm not really knowledgeable on outdoor stuff though, but it would seem to me that this would be the general idea...
I'm sure it will be fine outside, as long as its in a location where it won't get cut down or possibly stolen.
One idea though that you might want to try out, is to try cloning it! Get some rooting gel or powder and read up on cloning, give it a shot, then you could grow it indoors as well. Of course, you'd want to make sure its a female, and also keep in mind that it could be a variety that doesn't produce much THC.
I've only seen 3 bladed leaves in the early stages of growth, never when the plant is 2 feet tall. Could still be a mj plant but it makes me suspicious if all the leaves are 3 bladed.
Also all cannabis produces THC, even hemp.
-------------------- kickin-two-hundo said: you know what i did in english class? I came to class stoned out of my mind every day, i chugged vodka in the back of class, i put dead fish in the ceiling tiles. i put a gallon of old milk and orange juice in the file cabinet before winter vacation. i brought snakes in a tied up sweater and let them loose during class. i didnt go to school to learn, i went because i had to. i didnt care, and i didn't fucking listen to that stupid bitch. and i still don't fucking care. i tore the pages out of her books and burned them, and threw away all the books in the class, two books per day.
Quote: THEBats said: Also all cannabis produces THC, even hemp.
Yet people don't smoke hemp. This is why I qualified with the word "much".
Quote: BlargIAmDead said: Think there was a discussion about a weed look alike called like duck's foot or something. It's not weed and not psychoactive.
If it is Duck's Foot that you are talking about, it is weed and it will get you stoned. I'm sure it isn't as potent as some of the top strains, but it should be just fine.
Well I'll be damned. Hmm in the other discussion it seemed like people agreed it was just a weed (not WEED y'know ). I stand corrected cause when I Googled it all that comes up is "stealth grow with DUCKS FOOT!"
I've had plants that grown only 3 bladed leaves all through its life cycle, its a strain called "duck-foot" not the actual species duck foot which is what you posted the pictures of. Yes marijuana can start with one lamina, then 3, then 5, 7, 9, 11, and i've even had leaves with 13 lamina's, but I've also had a plant that went 1, 3, 3, 3, 3, etc... just stayed at 3 leaves and i've seen people buy this strain before, helps with stealth because it really doesn't look like a normal pot plant until it actually produces nuggets...heh
-------------------- Don't criticize what you can't understand
I'm sure if you crossed it it could have some benefits of being a high potent one.
Breeders From ICMAG discuss duckfoot as
Quote: Breeders report on Ducksfoot.
Plant structure: Up to 8 ft in height and can be as wide, average around 6 ft. Very large, bushy webbed leaved plant . . . tends to like to spread with training to produce masses of large tight and very heavy, smelly buds. Buds have been as large as my leg... The Ducksfoot seems to be a very hardy plant. It begins to show its webbed traits on the second set of leaves, that come out quite wedged shaped and usually single bladed. The following leaf is the typical 3 fingered Ducksfoot leaf. Successive leaves will continue up to seven apparent points, and can be very large, dinner plate size. The leaves progressively lessen in points as the plant ripens as with other varieties.
Yield: I have yielded huge amounts from my ducks, up to and over 2 pounds, due to its quick growth it is able to support hundreds of fat buds.
Maturing times: I am still working on what sort of time it matures in climates different to mine; in my climate it is planted anywhere between October and December, and is harvested late March to mid April. I have seen a few plants grown in the U.K. that veged well, but I don’t believe the ripening time was long enough to produce the same thing I get here, he said it was still going into November. Climates similar to Australia have had no problems at all, as far down as Perth in western oz...
Indoors: I have grown duck indoors a few times, they veged very well, but the buds were wispy and airy and didn’t seem worth the trouble. We had 2 plants that were successful out of 20 tested, the successful ones were very good, but I haven’t seen another suited one since and would recommend that it is not grown indoors, after all why hide a plant that has its own camouflage specially suited for the outdoors?..
Bud size and form: Some of the fattest and weightiest buds I’ve come across, green in colour... Bud formation can vary a little . . . have had them up to 4 inches in diameter and very solid, sometimes causing problems here with mould due to that fact...
Uniformity: All plants are webbed, but some variations can occur in bud formation, i.e. , some more looser Sativa type buds, and others will resemble the tighter Indica formation... All plants have a similar smell and taste, a little stronger in some than others. It has not bothered me to have some variation in the plants, but will breed out the Sativa-looking ones and stick to the tighter fatter buds in the near future. It is nice to see all the characteristics though and all plants have performed very well in my location.
Smell and taste: The duck has a very strong smell, even when quite young and a mature bush can be smelled from many meters away, kind of lingers in the air... Fresh buds smell very strong and will stink your house out, when dry and cured it has a very pleasant, to strong odors; a sweet hashy, spicy smell. The taste is the same as the smell, lingers on the palate for a long time afterwards and is very sweet and refreshing.
Stone: Nice smooth stone, very steady up and relaxing and happy, very little couch lock, but still quite the powerful smoke, happy weed would describe it perfectly...
My opinion: I really love growing the duck, it’s a really fun plant to grow and I always have some growing. The taste is just amazing and the stone brightens my day, even if it starts a little glum. I have bred many generations of this wonderful plant, and am really taken by its unique structure, growth pattern and fantastic smell...
Potential: The duck has shown a huge potential in the area of hybridization, its vigor is added to the cross very well, as well as the smell. The hybrids have been of good size, up to average of 1 pound, with huge heads, some up to 5 inches in diameter and tight; some buds were so robust they looked as though they were growing inside out... The recent addition of a webbed Indica to my seed collection may realize some fantastic potential with webbed plants... Spare a thought for the many Ducksfoot plants that gave their lives to bring you this report.