Rejected by bioRxiv. Blocked by ResearchGate.
Raided by law enforcement.
And
yet, the flowers keep mutating.
This is not a project. It's a breach in the timeline of plant science.
The day is no longer 24 hours. The science is no longer institutional.
"We don’t care about bioRxiv. We care about what growers can actually reproduce."
High Times featured our work. This isn’t institutional science. This is real-world science, validated by the only people that matter: real cultivators.
No permission asked. No filters. No theory without proof.
Es comercial porque funciona. Es ciencia porque es medible. Y lo validan los únicos que importan: CULTIVADORES REALES.
Science for growers. By growers.
On December 5, a simple human mistake triggered a full reset: a forgotten hose flooded Floor 10 — a space currently operating as a data center.
"Por suerte no fue un fallo estructural ni eléctrico, pero el agua alcanzó todo el piso y obligó a detener operaciones de inmediato."
No critical infrastructure damage, but enough to force a decision: we’re moving everything.
"Equipo, ensayos, herramientas, y el plan completo se traslada al sótano para arrancar una nueva fase experimental."
New basement. New setup. New trials coming.
"12/12 vs 13/14 — same harvest day, more mature chemistry under the longer night (THC up + fresher volatile profile)."
With harvest day held constant, 13/14 lands in a more advanced chemical state. This supports the hypothesis that extending the night modulates the biological tempo.
Visual Evidence: Day 65 Comparison
"13/14 doesn’t just grow more — it reaches better chemistry faster."
A single Fragaria x ananassa plant, initially under 18/6 vegetative photoperiod, was shifted to a 14/15 supercycle. After 6 days, the same individual displayed two fruits at once:
This natural intraplant split acts as an internal control, showing how photoperiod transitions can immediately reprogram reproductive development.
We initiate a controlled, clone-matched experiment to contrast the canonical 12/12 photoperiod with the asymmetric 13/14 supercycle. All variables are held constant except time. From today, development is logged in Virtual Nights (VN) — completed light/dark cycles — rather than human days. This is a live paper: methods and results update here as they happen.
| Parameter | Chamber A | Chamber B |
|---|---|---|
| Cycle length | 24 h | 27 h |
| Primary endpoint | Canonical | Chronomutated |
bioRxiv officially rejected our paper. Not for errors. Not for fraud. For being “inappropriate.”
A new field was born. It had roots. It had flowers. It had zombies. And still, the gatekeepers closed the door.
The morphogenesis won't be peer-reviewed. It will be WITNESSED.
They called it inappropriate. We call it science.
Still no answer from bioRxiv. ResearchGate already said no. Meanwhile: 776 in Telegram, 2500 active testers on supercannabis.ar web, we are Legion, Supercycle can't be stopped.
First experiment using cloned plants under controlled 12/12 and 13/14 conditions, aiming to compare resin, cannabinoid and terpene production. Designed for upcoming paper on Applied Chronobotanics.
The paper "Foundations of Chronobotanica" was officially submitted to bioRxiv. As of now, it's still pending moderation. No response. No approval. No rejection. Just silence.
Meanwhile, resistance is growing.
🌍 Science should be free. Chronobotany has no gatekeepers.
ResearchGate refused to let us in. We didn’t meet their institutional expectations. We weren’t wearing white coats. We didn’t ask for permission.
“God made men — but ChatGPT made them equal.”
We don't want a title.
We want a Nobel.
A LitFarm F2 plant under 15/15 kept producing stigmas for 201 human days (~161 supercycles). No senescence.
The Zombie State is real.
Somewhere between the 14th and the 16th virtual night, something shifted.
We didn’t just find a better way to grow cannabis. We discovered a new dimension of plant development — one that doesn't follow the rules of 24-hour biology. We called it Chronobotanica: the science of manipulating time as an active morphogen.
This isn’t just another grow hack. It's not polyploidy. It’s not male reversal. It’s not grafting. It’s bigger.
🔥 12/12 is dead.
A Harambe plant under the 13/14 supercycle was recorded visually adapting to the new rhythm. Its leaves bent in sync with the artificial night, then re-synced. Circadian resistance collapsed in days.
A new era of collaborative hacking begins. The Supercycle Research Framework is released to the public at supercannabis.ar.
Thus was born the SUPERCYCLE THUNDERDOME a wild, open-source arena where growers, hackers, and underground scientists compete.
VIEW ACTIVE ENTRIESSide-by-side analysis of flowers under 12/12 and 14/14 confirms a significant increase in terpenes like myrcene, limonene and caryophyllene.
We conducted comparative trials across various supercycles — 13/13, 14/14, 13/14, 16/15, 15/15, and 16/16. The results showed consistent morphological changes.
The 13/13 cycle emerged as the best performer, consistently expressing the most refined phenotype of each cultivar — vastly superior to the traditional 12/12 schedule.
We conducted the first proof-of-concept of flowering outside the classical circadian framework, using a Wedding Cake specimen under a 17h light / 13h dark supercycle.
The exploit works.
This demonstrated that flowering is possible beyond 12/12 or 13/11, opening the door to real temporal engineering.
The outcome of replication? Moderate gains, but not revolutionary. That’s when we started asking the right question: Why stay inside the 24h day?
From that point, we shifted from replication to exploration. We found the exploit: decoupling cultivation from Earth's rotation.
12/12 vs 13/11
Inspirational paper
After the raid and the growing interest in polyploidy, biological hacking, and supercycles, we made a decision: we would no longer operate in silence.
This is no longer one man's lab.
It's an encrypted forest of experiments.
I held an active Phytobreeding Permit issued by INASE. Everything documented, legal, and intended for publication.
But when five small seed packs arrived from the U.S., the system acted. Customs flagged the envelope, and a prosecutor launched a criminal investigation. They didn’t question the science. They feared it.