Maximising yield in a commercial grow

SamWE19

Well-Known Member
When you have to seriously start considering transportation logistics, like renting a box truck, then you are commercial.

Well it pays the bills for now lol. I will eventually have to expand when big companies start churning out tonnes of bud.
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
In your position I would focus on quality and rare genetics and the like, not yields. Competing against commercial grows, your niche is to provide superior quality at a smaller scale. Changing your focus to yields in order to compete with the big boys is going to hurt in the long run as your prices will fall dramatically.
 

hybridway2

Amare Shill
I was thinking the same individual supports costing around 350-400 usd or the net costing less than 60 usd

I’m struggling to figure how I am going to mount the net though. I was planning on making a wood frame and line it With Mylar that I sit between the light stack and the pipes to reflect light hitting the floor. So I wouldn’t be able to mount the net frame on the floor.

You have any ideas?
Im sorry but for 8yrs of growing & with a high plant # the questions you're asking & contemplating are very amateur hour. Sorry dude. No offense

But you can kill it just starting fresh. The more i learned the harder it got. Lol! Great threads here doing that type if growing. Check out The Kix Way @Kix for one.
Individual support is caging for dirt cheap.
Not for your intented goals of many plants in a 1x1 though. I'd recommend 3.5" Trellis netting. X2 rows.
5x30' is like $20 , i dont pay attention but buy it every grow.
Ferring strip on wall, screw every 6" . Hang net. Although i wish i made mine adjustable up n down rather then fixed.
 

SamWE19

Well-Known Member
Well I considered commercial a business that makes an income that pays the bills..

Either way all advice here has been helpful thanks.

Gonna start a journal soon to follow the pheno selection process
 

SamWE19

Well-Known Member
veg and top the rooted clones and when you are ready you have lots of cuts ready from the winners. Label carefully.
Would you not flower the rooted clones to see how they react as a clone not a seed, take clones of all the clones and compare the flowered seed to the flowered clones and pick the winner from the 2nd generation of clones?
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
Would you not flower the rooted clones to see how they react as a clone not a seed, take clones of all the clones and compare the flowered seed to the flowered clones and pick the winner from the 2nd generation of clones?
You can do that too, I like to cull obvious losers the first run and keep anything that has potential, then sort the true winner over the next few runs running batches of clones from each. You may find that two plants that have the same quality and yield will vary on something else like rooting time.
 
Top