8deez8
Active Member
This year marks my third growing season. I've heard a lot of people say that growing outdoors is hard work, and while I can't disagree, I'd like to share some short cuts me and my friends have found (growing on public land, hit and miss) that make a 40 plant plot a mornings work. comments additions welcome
This is written for latitude 20-33~, I've found it easy to pull 6-8 zips a plant letting the climate do most of the work for me in years past.
I use commercial (brick) seeds that doesnt look indoor grown, and although nice genetics would be nice I don't know if I'd trade them. Usually these mid plants have 9+ wk (long) flower and give massive yields per plant.
I use a guitar case to stealthily move what I need to do 40-50 "twin tower plots" per run. In this case, I have half a bag (sometimes a lil less, this comprises most of the weight I carry) of black kow .5-.5-.5 compost, a bag of perlite, and a shovel with a head shaped similar to a post hole digger, about 4 ft long, got mine at homies. I let the handle of the shovel go where the neck of the guitar usu. sits.
Up until the end of April and even into may, I take this pack out and use the shovel to dig 9-12 in wide holes at the top, tapering them getting slightly narrower to about about 30-36in deep, having about a 6 in wide hole at the bottom. This creates a hole the shape of an upside down cone with the tip cut off.
I approximate how much to amend the soil (juding by darkness of existing soil), usually quite a bit as I like to choose slightly drier, sandier dirt. Marijuana plants like it drier than most noobs think (and drier than most other plants).
I mix in a good bit of perlite, about 15%. Not only do MJ plants love perlite, but this directs the roots (being the path of least resistance) into the hole you've created, already a shape conducive to their growth.
I churn this up (usu. one shovel head full black kow) nicely in the hole and place 4-5 tiger stripe monsters in there about an inch under some loose pack. (They germinate naturally at the perfect time) If you're really going for a hands off method, you can add extended release fertilizer with high p-k and low n (NPK) atleast 2 feet down, and don't overdo it! Half of pkg rec or less. This is not recommended but if you can't bring nutes in later.... Hell if you can't be back to pick males you prob need to rethink your sitch anyway
Let these babies veg all summer! you should have atleast one plant per hole, but if you ahve 2, don't kill it just yet...
The twin towers method was originally meant to increase the occurence of a females growing in each of holes me and my buds so laborously dug. After doing this, I noticed that there are also additional benefits that may exceed the first!!!
If you have two plants per hole competing for light, this is good. let them compete for vegetative growth. If you picked a nice sunny spot, don't worry about them getting too spindly next to each other, all the sugars both produce will eventually feed just one. Late summer, when they begin flowering, you will be able to kill the males. In my experience, cutting the males (w scissors to get as close to root as possible) whos root systems are entangled with females boosts the growth of the entangled female. As the roots of the cut males die, they provide natural, clean sugars for your still living females, and you will see noticibly more swollen buds. I am quite sure this is the same as adding molasses or other sugars to promote organic growth. The roots die at an increasing rate the later on it flowers, I've given molasses teas to my plants and i must say the rate the roots die is perfect for the molasses/sugar feeding schedule.
This is written for latitude 20-33~, I've found it easy to pull 6-8 zips a plant letting the climate do most of the work for me in years past.
I use commercial (brick) seeds that doesnt look indoor grown, and although nice genetics would be nice I don't know if I'd trade them. Usually these mid plants have 9+ wk (long) flower and give massive yields per plant.
I use a guitar case to stealthily move what I need to do 40-50 "twin tower plots" per run. In this case, I have half a bag (sometimes a lil less, this comprises most of the weight I carry) of black kow .5-.5-.5 compost, a bag of perlite, and a shovel with a head shaped similar to a post hole digger, about 4 ft long, got mine at homies. I let the handle of the shovel go where the neck of the guitar usu. sits.
Up until the end of April and even into may, I take this pack out and use the shovel to dig 9-12 in wide holes at the top, tapering them getting slightly narrower to about about 30-36in deep, having about a 6 in wide hole at the bottom. This creates a hole the shape of an upside down cone with the tip cut off.
I approximate how much to amend the soil (juding by darkness of existing soil), usually quite a bit as I like to choose slightly drier, sandier dirt. Marijuana plants like it drier than most noobs think (and drier than most other plants).
I mix in a good bit of perlite, about 15%. Not only do MJ plants love perlite, but this directs the roots (being the path of least resistance) into the hole you've created, already a shape conducive to their growth.
I churn this up (usu. one shovel head full black kow) nicely in the hole and place 4-5 tiger stripe monsters in there about an inch under some loose pack. (They germinate naturally at the perfect time) If you're really going for a hands off method, you can add extended release fertilizer with high p-k and low n (NPK) atleast 2 feet down, and don't overdo it! Half of pkg rec or less. This is not recommended but if you can't bring nutes in later.... Hell if you can't be back to pick males you prob need to rethink your sitch anyway
Let these babies veg all summer! you should have atleast one plant per hole, but if you ahve 2, don't kill it just yet...
The twin towers method was originally meant to increase the occurence of a females growing in each of holes me and my buds so laborously dug. After doing this, I noticed that there are also additional benefits that may exceed the first!!!
If you have two plants per hole competing for light, this is good. let them compete for vegetative growth. If you picked a nice sunny spot, don't worry about them getting too spindly next to each other, all the sugars both produce will eventually feed just one. Late summer, when they begin flowering, you will be able to kill the males. In my experience, cutting the males (w scissors to get as close to root as possible) whos root systems are entangled with females boosts the growth of the entangled female. As the roots of the cut males die, they provide natural, clean sugars for your still living females, and you will see noticibly more swollen buds. I am quite sure this is the same as adding molasses or other sugars to promote organic growth. The roots die at an increasing rate the later on it flowers, I've given molasses teas to my plants and i must say the rate the roots die is perfect for the molasses/sugar feeding schedule.