Growing In Hell

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
Man thank you boys for the info. It's different when you get it from the people. Here's to success and I'll probably just keep updating in here unless I upgrade from newbie. Thank y'all for being a great community!
No problem. I have never grown outdoor in heat like there. But if I did I might bury a container with the soil you want and then mulch the shit out of it. Keep the moisture where you need it. Well only if I didn't have a indoor option.
 

spek9

Well-Known Member
Careful on how hot the container gets you can cook the roots to bud. LOL I know that metal table can get hot! Sat on a metal chair in phoenix at 6am and burned my ass!
I only have one experience in Arizona. I've been to and have driven through 32 of the states, almost all of them more than once. Arizona is one I haven't driven through or been to before.

Was on a flight from Curacau to Calgary via Miami and Phoenix. Miami? No problem. I'm used to high humidity and nice warm temps. Got off the plane in Phoenix, and when I stepped out of the terminal, it was like I walked into hell. I'm pretty sure it was 120F in the shade, 0% humidity, and a slight breeze. When I say breeze, I mean a brick wall of hell that totally overwhelms and encapsulates you. Lost my breath immediately, and felt like I was going to pass out.

I've traveled extensively, and have even lived in dry, arid environments for good stretches. I'll never forget that day though. Any time someone mentions Phoenix, AZ, the anxiety of that wall of hell comes flooding back ;)
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
I only have one experience in Arizona. I've been to and have driven through 32 of the states, almost all of them more than once. Arizona is one I haven't driven through or been to before.

Was on a flight from Curacau to Calgary via Miami and Phoenix. Miami? No problem. I'm used to high humidity and nice warm temps. Got off the plane in Phoenix, and when I stepped out of the terminal, it was like I walked into hell. I'm pretty sure it was 120F in the shade, 0% humidity, and a slight breeze. When I say breeze, I mean a brick wall of hell that totally overwhelms and encapsulates you. Lost my breath immediately, and felt like I was going to pass out.

I've traveled extensively, and have even lived in dry, arid environments for good stretches. I'll never forget that day though. Any time someone mentions Phoenix, AZ, the anxiety of that wall of hell comes flooding back ;)
Sounds like me! Fucking plane door opened an I said to my wife fuck this let's turn this plane around! Was like opening the oven door! I was the best man for an outdoor wedding in a tux!
 

Prescott480

Active Member
Pretty much. I'll try to add what I can through my experience.im used to humidity also in South Carolina. 100° with 100% humidity. AZ is a different beast. Your sweat dries up and so do you. If I get to that point I'll make some brownies on the sidewalk for y'all!
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
Pretty much. I'll try to add what I can through my experience.im used to humidity also in South Carolina. 100° with 100% humidity. AZ is a different beast. Your sweat dries up and so do you. If I get to that point I'll make some brownies on the sidewalk for y'all!
Rented a house with a pool that week.........pool water was 90 and we where cold from it evaporating so fast! 2 min your shorts are dry!
 

spek9

Well-Known Member
Pretty much. I'll try to add what I can through my experience.im used to humidity also in South Carolina. 100° with 100% humidity. AZ is a different beast. Your sweat dries up and so do you. If I get to that point I'll make some brownies on the sidewalk for y'all!
Yeah. East coast is a 180 degrees in that regard from west. I lived out east most of my life, and traveled up and down the coast from Nova Scotia to Miami, FL more times than I can count. Out west, on the east side of the Rocky Mountains is typically closer to the 0% side on the humidity scale, where Toronto and east is the opposite.

Mostly I prefer the dry environment, as it doesn't cause such large swings of how it affects the human body. For example, I could be reasonably comfortable at -35C (when dressed appropriately) at 0% humidity in Calgary, but fly to Toronto or further east the same week where it's only -20C with 80% humidity, and it feels so very cold your body literally burns all over.

AZ was outside of that range entirely. Never experienced anything like it. Like I said, I've been to many places, but that one experience taught me that I shouldn't take environmental experience for granted.

You just never know when you're going to get out of a plane or your vehicle and instantaneously feel like you're burning in hell. ...and I'm one who has been evacuated and forced to move due to forest fire.
 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
I haven't started doing anything yet. I'm doing research on how I should do it before. And I'm probably going to use a light mix. How should I follow the growth period and flowering? How much moisture should be in growth and flowering to be perfect?
growweedeasy.com start there.
 
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