nowhereland
Active Member
this year i actually got some spare cash to spend on preventative and active defense, mainly need it for pm, i got neem what else should i pickup?
Eagle 20 for PM
I never understood that, "Known to the state of California", so what no one else feds, or any other states look into this? something either causes cancer or it doesn't, its not like only Californians are susceptible to this.
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Look at the MSDS and you will see that it contains components that are known by the state of California to cause cancer.
i.e. napthalene
and Mycobutanil itself is know to cause birth defects and reproductive harm.
This stuff is bad news....
[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]arm[/FONT]
Is there anything that doesn't supposedly cause cancer?
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Look at the MSDS and you will see that it contains components that are known by the state of California to cause cancer.
i.e. napthalene
and Mycobutanil itself is know to cause birth defects and reproductive harm.
This stuff is bad news....
[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]arm[/FONT]
i think its because cali is one of the few states that actually post defects in products or some shit like that, its like a law, we should be happy they do, next time you go into any fast food joint there should be a little sign by where you pick up your food that says the same thingI never understood that, "Known to the state of California", so what no one else feds, or any other states look into this? something either causes cancer or it doesn't, its not like only Californians are susceptible to this.
youd think feds would adopt the same principle, somethings seriously fucked about companies knowingly selling us things without mentioning how bad it is. How these regulated products even make it on the shelf is beyond me. And the same govt that that allows us to consume and be in contact with these, can somehow say I cant smoke a joint because its a danger to my health. Its so fucked.. but its just the same old argument its not gonna change. As long as money runs the system things will continue on the way they arei think its because cali is one of the few states that actually post defects in products or some shit like that, its like a law, we should be happy they do, next time you go into any fast food joint there should be a little sign by where you pick up your food that says the same thing
Where the fuck were these 2 guys spraying the eagle20? In mouths? Jesus christ!i've seen a few people use eagle 20 without masks then shit out blood for like 3 days.
first guy i saw it happen to, just figured he was in shit health, then my health nut roommate tried it out and started shitting blood too. so, eagle 20 = shit blood?
i don't need to know what california thinks, having seen that lol...
If I were to do another run in that wetland, I'd use diluted neem and doctor it up with a bit of pyrethrin concentrate. Last year was awful up here, spring was very wet and insects tore up my clones until mid-June when it finally dried out.Whether they are right or wrong, the summer forecasters are calling for another carbon copy of last year's cooler, wetter than normal season for those of us east of the Mississippi. I have zero intentions of going through another year with the amount of pm/mold/budrot that I dealt with last year, without trying like hell to prevent it. Has anybody here used a couple tbsps neem oil extract per gallon of water as a mold preventative and was it successful? I'm not too hip on spraying non-organic chems on my plants and just wondered if spraying down the foliage a couple times per month with the diluted neem oil was effective for preventing rot?
I had forgot about Pyrethrin being organic. Good call as I had a LOT of leap hoppers last year. I'm particularly worried about my Jackberry this year, as I'm hoping taking your recommendation of planting Caramel Candy Kush and it's resistance assures less worries with that strain. The nearly pure indica Jackberry is supposed to be extremely dense and that sounds like a recipe for mold if it's cool and moist like last season. I'm hoping the Sweet Skunk from Peak will be pretty resistant to rot as well, with its sativa dominance.If I were to do another run in that wetland, I'd use diluted neem and doctor it up with a bit of pyrethrin concentrate. Last year was awful up here, spring was very wet and insects tore up my clones until mid-June when it finally dried out.
Sunny hillsides would resolve the issue, only those are not an option in my area plus I'd have to water constantly. That wetland had a high water table, plants simply tapped right into the source.
Good 2 see you back!