My New Mission Quest and an S.O.S.

Gorilla Mike

New Member
I am a pro grower and want to see how my fellow growers are dealing with the ramifications of the Jeff Sessions issue and sharing my own special growing and harvesting techniques. When I was learning to grow 30 years ago, pure learning was my biggest thrill in growing. (Besides smoking my finished Buds!) I keep learning and applying all the latest science in growing bigger better Buds but now my new mission is learning how to streamline my harvest techniques. And along with that, I’m on a quest to find the perfect automated trimming machine!



With over 2500 plants at anyone time (and that number just keeps on growing!) production used to go smoothly because my grower gang simply switched over to hand-trimming after harvest and drying. But when the new automated bladed trimming machines came on the market I bought a pair to open up the bottleneck hand-trimming created. They weren’t cheap and for the first year, when they were running great my growers/hand-trimmers switched over the operate the machines and there was no bottleneck.



But then these expensive little bastards would break down even after regular maintenance pit-stops and we were back to the bottleneck situation. I’d just buy another pair of bladed trimmer from another brand while my originals where sent back to the factory for repair to get us out of the bottleneck. But that routine was getting to be an expensive pain in the ass. After a year the new machines would break down and right on cue a new brand of bladed trimmer would jump on the market and I’d buy that pair to replace the broke-down ones.



These things were supposed to be saving me time and money but they were making me spend more! That’s why my new mission and quest in life is to find the perfect automated trimming machine that don’t breakdown after the first year. Now, I believe I’ve tried every EVERY bladed trimmer on the market and I’m still not happy with their performance...Anybody got any suggestions?
 

Walter9999

Well-Known Member
Tools are important for production...have you considered an inventory of trimmers? Say you go through 10 in a year have 10 others available for use during the time needed for repair...you're gaining crops every year "invest" in your equipment it will give you piece of mind...and its deductible...FYI, I've never used a trimmer machine but I've owned a mfging facility...what was the determining factor for doneness 30 years ago? Just curious...g/l
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
i think it might be worth it to train one or two of your trim crew in how to fix the machines. they can't be that complicated. see if you can order some spare parts, and let them fuck with one of the old ones and see if they can get it running. if they can, you got a new side line, repairing trimmers....

you didn't say, are you in a legal facility? if you are, write that shit off as a business expense
 

SchmoeJoe

Well-Known Member
i think it might be worth it to train one or two of your trim crew in how to fix the machines. they can't be that complicated. see if you can order some spare parts, and let them fuck with one of the old ones and see if they can get it running. if they can, you got a new side line, repairing trimmers....

you didn't say, are you in a legal facility? if you are, write that shit off as a business expense
Because of tax code 280e you can't use right offs when growing weed. Besides, any "pro grower" who doesn't want to compromise if the work they've done throughout the entire cycle to produce a top quality product isn't going to want to fuck it up by beating the shit out of it with a trimming machine.

My best suggestion is to have a dedicated crew or contract with a specialized harvesting/trimming company.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
i agree with you in spirit, but once you start talking about 2500 plants, that's a lot of hand trimming..
i think the ag industry has to catch up. they have specialized machinery to harvest almost every crop, massey ferguson or allis-chalmers should get on this, they could make a lot of money with a machine that actually works
 

SchmoeJoe

Well-Known Member
i agree with you in spirit, but once you start talking about 2500 plants, that's a lot of hand trimming..
i think the ag industry has to catch up. they have specialized machinery to harvest almost every crop, massey ferguson or allis-chalmers should get on this, they could make a lot of money with a machine that actually works
There's the thing. If you want to produce a top level product at scale you have to scale everything, including your trimming crew, or compromise your quality to go from commercial scale production to industrial.
 
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