pete666 wrote:Wakinyan, have you ever tested hers alkaloid content by extraction or analysis? I would be very interested in how much medicine is there, after such effort...
Do all wine sommelier extract and perform analysis before giving a critique ? Having been a member of the NAC for several decades, I find that while my ability is not as great as some, it doesn't take much to detect a great difference in content. Those great differences in content are what I am after. The subtle shades in-between do not matter to me.
So, when I put out a stack of 100+ seed grown specimens along with some known specimens for comparison and I tell you hands down that these 14 are better than the next 14 I will show you by far... I believe that to be true based on my many years of experience. Could I be wrong? Could it be that I am letting my subjective biases get in the way?
Sure. Anything is possible. There are other tastes that could also be interfering with a proper analysis if one is only looking at one particular alkaloid.
This is why I have sent out not just 14, but 28 specimens rated from high to mid-range for another person to grow out. Another batch... also sent to the same person total over 100+ cacti so that they can confirm my initial analysis. I believe in all honesty a simple slice and a very small taste will confirm that there is indeed something special going on if this is done with each and every one of these specimens in the order I have presented them. Yes, they are indeed small, but such a small taste test can hardly be overlooked when one is planted such specimens and choosing which to keep and which to discard. My sincere hope, these are indeed tested, but not until after they are tested further after this, but not until enough material is present to enable the security of these specimens in this particular person's stockpile. I do not wish for these genetics to be lost simply for the sake of a quantitative analysis.
With that being said, FBG was only shared with a very few people and I do consider it to be my strongest. Time will tell, but I surely wish and hope the person I have sent the majority of my potent specimens for analysis does indeed take a nibble of each one as the potent ones are clear mile stones away from the Trichocereus bridgesii in my opinion which again... is why I also supplied many.... many specimens by which to compare them to as well as pure species Trichocereus bridgesii Monstrose crested form, wax form, etc.
With all of that being said, one of the first cacti I endorsed in the same manner later became known as Lumberjack. Another fellow also endorsed the same cacti at around the same time. That fellows name was Nitrogen if memory serves.
Wakinyan attached the following image(s):
14BiHightoMid.jpg
(2,428kb) downloaded 143 time(s). 14BiMidtoLow.jpg
(3,074kb) downloaded 141 time(s). 80extra.jpg
(3,082kb) downloaded 141 time(s).When I graft you graft we graft