Outdoor In The Corn

COdeviant

Member
Hey guys. My next season project is to turn the neighbors corn field into something sticky & icky with a dank smell to carry on the evening breeze. Any pointers. I figured I'd grown plants two to three weeks before transplanting them to the corn field, and time it so the corn was six to twelve inches tall.

What strain would you suggest; I though Big Bud could be propped up with some string tied to the corn stalks.

I figure I'll have to sneak in at night a couple times to thin the corn around my girls.

Please point out some pitfalls and or things I need to know to get this right.

Thanks :blsmoke:
 

Mr.Marijuana420

Well-Known Member
alright heres ur pit fall, when they decide to harvest the corn, u gotta harvest ur plant, which probably isnt goona be ready yet, also, say ur not home, when theyre harvesting the corn, ur plant is eaten by the harvester,
 

Grumpy'

Active Member
Another pitfall, your neighbor gets a flyover and gets arrested cause of you. Nice neighbor. Grow on yur own land or if yu must grow on land that isn't yours, at least make it state land.
 

tristynhawk

Well-Known Member
I grew Kaya gold in a corn field this year and it's almost done, and will get almost a pound a plant. But cornfields are very good guerrilla growing around here. Nothing much needs to be done for a successful grow in a corn field as you will using most off the farmer's work for your benefit. I have been doing it for years. I know grower's that pull 20-30 pounds a year from strictly cornfields. But i would use some water polymers so you don't have to water as much, hit it with fertilizer couple times a year and your golden. Don't sweat the hater's.

Guerrilla for life....tristynhawk
 

LittleT

Well-Known Member
has it been cut and home with you.if not i would not be counting yet.i had a nice one close to ready and of all things a deer cleaned it nothin but stalk left----bambi all high and stumbling around the woods --1 in the hand is worth 10 in the bush
 

tristynhawk

Well-Known Member
Yes i have one in hand..lol. And many more coming this week as the rain is setting in for awhile, and im not waiting that extra week gonna get it before the mold does.
 

Mr.Marijuana420

Well-Known Member
I grew Kaya gold in a corn field this year and it's almost done, and will get almost a pound a plant. But cornfields are very good guerrilla growing around here. Nothing much needs to be done for a successful grow in a corn field as you will using most off the farmer's work for your benefit. I have been doing it for years. I know grower's that pull 20-30 pounds a year from strictly cornfields. But i would use some water polymers so you don't have to water as much, hit it with fertilizer couple times a year and your golden. Don't sweat the hater's.

Guerrilla for life....tristynhawk
im am by far not hating on guerilla growers, im one my self and hav much respect for the hard work that goes into it, way more than ne indoor or backyard grow, im juz saying that u dnt kno when they harvest the corn, if u can find a field that u nkow they dnt harvest for awhile, for example feed corn feilds they often let the corn stalks go completely brown and dry before they harvest, if u find that kinda feild go for it, but u nvr kno for sure, ive known ppl to lose nice plants to a corn harvest, before they were ready
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Hey guys. My next season project is to turn the neighbors corn field into something sticky & icky with a dank smell to carry on the evening breeze. Any pointers. I figured I'd grown plants two to three weeks before transplanting them to the corn field, and time it so the corn was six to twelve inches tall.

What strain would you suggest; I though Big Bud could be propped up with some string tied to the corn stalks.

I figure I'll have to sneak in at night a couple times to thin the corn around my girls.

Please point out some pitfalls and or things I need to know to get this right.

Thanks :blsmoke:
here is something for you: don't fuck over the farmer by trespassing on his property, destroying his crop, and mooching off his work.
 

tristynhawk

Well-Known Member
im am by far not hating on guerilla growers, im one my self and hav much respect for the hard work that goes into it, way more than ne indoor or backyard grow, im juz saying that u dnt kno when they harvest the corn, if u can find a field that u nkow they dnt harvest for awhile, for example feed corn feilds they often let the corn stalks go completely brown and dry before they harvest, if u find that kinda feild go for it, but u nvr kno for sure, ive known ppl to lose nice plants to a corn harvest, before they were ready
yea guerrilla growing is a bitch, you will lose plant' sometime's. But that's part of guerrilla growing in my mind, i mean hell chopper's fly for it, thieves look for it, deer and rabbit, eat it, and disease and fungi attack it. The oddsa are against ya....lol
 

tristynhawk

Well-Known Member
i Growed up in watching the chopper and national guard pull MJ outta the woods around here. Was pretty kool in high school to watch them haul big truck loads away.
 

psychedelictripper

Well-Known Member
How about the roundup the farmer might be using? That stuff is cancerous. If monsanto wasn't greasing the wallets and probably the butts of politicians that stuff would have been outlawed. It's a herbicide. It's designed to kill weeds. There's also the type of fertilizers most farmers use. Most farmers are not organic. They will use that high nitrogen man made crap to get their corn growing fast. Farmer might have the last laugh as you wind up with over chemicalized weed. If we're talking a large field, how about that low flying crop duster?
 

LittleT

Well-Known Member
outdoor grows away from you can be stressfull.i lost a nice budded female 2 weeks ago to the deer---they had to get stoned though.helis have searched my area 2 times in 3 weeks have found a few close also not mine though .hunters putting corn out for the deer and lookin for weed take alot thats not ready---destry it or call the cops.and 2 months of budding seems to take 6 months.its very expensive here if you get cought growing.15 yrs ago ---1 plant cost me 6000.00 in taxes not countin lawyer fees ---court cost---etc
 
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