growing in the same hole?

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
The only trapper in Jenison, MI. moved back to PA. He got upto 2 dozen 6 foot plus coyotes every year I knew him here. And in condo and golf course backyards. No hunting or discharge of so much as a blowgun. Wait till "Fluffy" becomes snack of choice. I do like coyotes taste for outside and feral cats though. Damn deer are an obnoxious gang of street thugs here. I'll get a picture of about 20 eating bait in a stupid neighbors driveway and in the garage.
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
Feeding deer in winter here is highly frowned on. Im guessing there too. Warden might be able to end that?
Nope. Legal as we cannot shoot. And I easily could from my lazy boy. Just a few feet out my front door as they devour hundreds of dollars and labor in lillies. And un afraid of us.
 

bam0813

Well-Known Member
Thats rough. It’s actually not good for the deer either. I meant after season though we can’t shoot either but if they see you youll get a lecture i know those don’t stop alot of people but never know especially if property is being damaged
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
Holy $&@“they must if all come here lol. Skunks are the main culprits here in my findings but agree coons k9s everything will especially in fall when it’s getting to be slim pickings
I haven't even seen a dead skunk on the road here in NW Florida for the last 25-30 years. We pretty much have everything else though. Deer is what hurts my growing the most.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
It's hard to imagine, but less than 100 years ago, the deer population was so low that some states instituted deer management programs to help increase the deer population. In the 1930's, there were approximately 300,000 deer nationwide. Today, estimates put that number around 30 million. Why the staggering increase?Jun 12, 2018
Ag land will always increase the herd. But with not very many folks hunting in large sections near towns, there is nothing to cull out the weak and sick ones.
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
I haven't even seen a dead skunk on the road here in NW Florida for the last 25-30 years. We pretty much have everything else though. Deer is what hurts my growing the most.
I'd mail you a few sail skunks. But USPS may get upset. Also the permits and licensing.

My orchard owning friends get block permits for crop damage control. You can't find enough safe shooters to make a dent on the property. All you can kill between the dates. Deer just vacate after a few shots ring out. State owned and exploited animals. No responsibility or recourse.
 

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
M
It s illegal in a verry stealth nature spot in my hood i live near a lake and a lot of nature
Must be nice there. Never been to any hood that had a lake, let alone having the ability to leave things outside without them disappearing overnight. Lol
If you got a solid spot keep it, but find another for plan B to kick in with a head start if someone stumbles upon your secret garden.
The answers about the same hole have already been handled. I personally been digging in the same hole for 17 years now. We ain’t talking Mother Earth tho :eyesmoke: :bigjoint:
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
We got possum up here now larry never saw one till 10 yrs ago now splattered all over the place
Same with the coyote here. Never saw or heard one until 20-25 years ago. Now the Sandhill sounds like New Mexico every night.

PS. Possum and sweet potato baked together is fittin. My Granny used to cook it for me when I was a kid.
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
Same with the coyote here. Never saw or heard one until 20-25 years ago. Now the Sandhill sounds like New Mexico every night.

PS. Possum and sweet potato baked together is fittin. My Granny used to cook it for me when I was a kid.
I like possum and sweet taters. But not as casserole. Possums remove those sail skunk, rabbits, wood chucks and squirrels after dark. We like them. Not like for vittles and fixins.
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
..and if you're up against a tree/tree line make sure of where the sun will be in Sept/Oct so you maximize plant placement. Sun angle in April is much different than in Augt/Sept. I learned this the hard way in the beginning when guerrilla growing.
I use a shade row to force early flower outdoors in northern climate.

Would have negative effect on an auto though.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
When I was in my twenties, and gung ho about developing an organic system to use in my guerilla grows, I had an old man trick the shizz out of me.
This was back when Subcool was creating his Supersoil mix. We were all contributing on the forums with our own experience.
This old dude convinced me to bury a rockfish in the ground where I was going to plant.
Sounded good to me, because fish emulsion was something familiar to me.
Turns out, it takes more than one season for a 40 inch rockfish to break down in the soil.
I ruined over half my planting spots for three years.
Rotted fish in the ground is not helpful to growing plants.
Only after it's decomposed is it useful.
Learned a rough lesson = Maybe don't trust a dude who has his hair AND beard tied in a knot.
How fast the fish decomposes depends on how alive the soil is to begin with. Of course it's better to compost it first though. And a 40 inch fish is kinda big for the bottom of a hole.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
..and if you're up against a tree/tree line make sure of where the sun will be in Sept/Oct so you maximize plant placement. Sun angle in April is much different than in Augt/Sept. I learned this the hard way in the beginning when guerrilla growing.
I did a thread a couple three larry's ago about that sort of thing. You can count backwards from summer or winter solstice and figure out what the solar situation looks like for a day in fall by looking at a day in spring. *

*too much blueberry my ass to explain more coherently atm.
 
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