weedman11
Active Member
So heres a quick one for you guys.
The other day i had gone to Nelson Ledges in Nelson township, Garrettsville, N.E. OHIO. Its always a great time and i find alot of great people always there. Kinda an old hippie get together with great tunes. But i ran in to this old hippie guy who i found out lives a few miles from me. Awesome. Well we got to talking about growing and whatnot and he brought up the idea of regeneration. Keeping you plants around outdoors year round to keep using the same plant over again year after year. Making it stronger and stronger each year with a larger and larger root mass. This idea intrigued me. From what he says he has a 14 year old plant that still grows and flowers each year, better and better every year.
He said the trick to the deal was after your harvest chopping your plant and leaving a bit of stalk "6-8in" in the ground, the proceding to insulate his plant with bails of hay. Then next season he removes them and the plant starts to grow again. This is what he said hes been doing for 14 years with one plant. Im working on gettin a picture, but im skeptical?
Does anyone know if this is myth, or true? The idea sounds amazing, but to good to be true.
peace
The other day i had gone to Nelson Ledges in Nelson township, Garrettsville, N.E. OHIO. Its always a great time and i find alot of great people always there. Kinda an old hippie get together with great tunes. But i ran in to this old hippie guy who i found out lives a few miles from me. Awesome. Well we got to talking about growing and whatnot and he brought up the idea of regeneration. Keeping you plants around outdoors year round to keep using the same plant over again year after year. Making it stronger and stronger each year with a larger and larger root mass. This idea intrigued me. From what he says he has a 14 year old plant that still grows and flowers each year, better and better every year.
He said the trick to the deal was after your harvest chopping your plant and leaving a bit of stalk "6-8in" in the ground, the proceding to insulate his plant with bails of hay. Then next season he removes them and the plant starts to grow again. This is what he said hes been doing for 14 years with one plant. Im working on gettin a picture, but im skeptical?
Does anyone know if this is myth, or true? The idea sounds amazing, but to good to be true.
peace