Well Here Goes Again

gumball

Well-Known Member
Here's my Tangerine Dream from today. They get their first 'rain' tomorrow. I'm gonna start with a 1/4 Jacks/gallon then water any others with that super low dose. I'm not sure what those spots are and the discolored low leafs. Any ideas? I can see I have two distinct phenos. I'm liking the more Indica leafed one.
Daniels:weed:
They look good up top, but it is just the bottom. I know cal def starts at the top, and mag starts at the bottom. But that looks like more than mag. Funny thing is you know EXACTLY whats in your soil, and its nutrient value. maybe they are telling you to transplant...

I see the pheno's too, looks Sativa up top, and indica down low!!! There both DAMN sexy though.

These politicians disgust me. Dont remember where you posted but I would gladly roll these bitches up in a constitution laced american flag joint and smoke their asses! Maybe that will force some knowledge up to them.
 

gumball

Well-Known Member
So the main Cola on SS #4 'my retarded pig' got too heavy and bent over. I had to add more wires to the wooden dowel. I have to be real careful, as it can't handle any movement. My guess is it's gonna be a pitifully airy cola.
SS #1 is still plugging along. Both got a dose of 1/2 tsp. Jacks/Qt. and then got plain water.
Daniels:weed:
She is still a beast, a retarded beast, but she's doable :lol: Damn, I cant believe I am 3 pages behind in your threads too :(
 

smoke n strum

Active Member
She is still a beast, a retarded beast, but she's doable :lol: Damn, I cant believe I am 3 pages behind in your threads too :(
The only reason you are three pages behind is because of my ramblings last night and me not knowing how to single out part of a post to quote it... Somebody left a bottle of Henry Mckenna out (a cheaper version of Jack Daniels)last night, and I found it. Then I started gabbing... Sorry Daniels...sns
 

Uncle Ben

Well-Known Member
I read your soil recipe somewhere on here I think, but can't remember where. Can You point me at it?
Years old and subject to change. IOW, as long as you understand that by adding or taking away this, that and the other regarding how the materials variations change the nutrient charge and soil structure, you damn well can do about anything and get away with it. It's all in the balance. Here's a guide fer ya:

I use alot of brown sphagnum peat moss, a large bag of Schultz potting mix, and a bag of cheap potting soil (screened to get rid of the chunky stuff) to make up enough for 30 to 40 gallons of a final mix, which I mix on a cement floor using a shovel and store in large garbage cans. To this base which provides humates, an acidic hit, trace elements, etc. and a little silt to tighten up the mix and retain moisture, I add:

6 or so cups blood meal, 3 or so cups bonemeal, 4 cups dolomite lime, 1 large bag each of vermiculite and perlite (available at Casa dePOT) and alfalfa meal which contains a hormone called triacontanol (purported to increase vegetable production up to 60%). I buy alfalfa feed pellets from a farm and ranch supply store, put about 4 cups of the pellets in a bucket with a gallon of water and give it a good squirt of Ivory dish soap to cut the surface tension, let it stand for 30 minutes, and then dump the slurry into the mix on the floor. I sometimes add composted horse manure, maybe about 3 or 4 gallons of it. The final, slightly moist soil mix is turned well with a shovel and stored for a couple of weeks in garbage cans to "mellow".
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
These politicians disgust me. Dont remember where you posted but I would gladly roll these bitches up in a constitution laced american flag joint and smoke their asses! Maybe that will force some knowledge up to them.
It's "I would rather someone be wrapped in the Constitution burning the flag than wrapped in the flag burning the Constitution.":bigjoint:
Or give me liberty or give me death.:fire:

She is still a beast, a retarded beast, but she's doable :lol: Damn, I cant believe I am 3 pages behind in your threads too :(
Spending all that time textn' on your new phone.:leaf:

The only reason you are three pages behind is because of my ramblings last night and me not knowing how to single out part of a post to quote it... Somebody left a bottle of Henry Mckenna out (a cheaper version of Jack Daniels)last night, and I found it. Then I started gabbing... Sorry Daniels...sns
No worries at all. At least the gabbing was cannabis related.:-P

Years old and subject to change. IOW, as long as you understand that by adding or taking away this, that and the other regarding how the materials variations change the nutrient charge and soil structure, you damn well can do about anything and get away with it. It's all in the balance. Here's a guide fer ya:
There it is.:-P That was the basis for my mix. Thx.
My Master Gardening class was on stone fruit, small fruit and composting. I really want to start the composting. I need to get a spot, but easiest one isn't best sun.
When I was speaking at The Politics in the Pub with Irvin Rosenfeld, the fed patient. An older lady, like late 70's, was glad to hear of a grower getting that certification. I got no questions on it or growing during the Q & A, cause the cop, Irvin and the Dr. did most of the speaking.

that is the exact post I was talking about. That is the very first thing I read when i found RIU back in February. Thanks
I saw it LAST February and could never find it again.
Daniels:weed:
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
Didn't forget BKB:-P
Air Pot had the results from examining the roots and their structure. The root mass was larger. You can see the spinning on the normal pot. I'll make more of these. UB has a thread on this subject, I'm just behind on finishing it. I was expecting something like this.
Daniels:bigjoint:
Air pot done.jpgAir pot roots.jpgAir pot roots 2.jpg
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
I finally got the scent of the Purple Rain decided. Pink Lemonade, maybe a Raspberry Lemonade. I was getting a citrus, but also a fruity smell. My buddies wife, who doesn't smoke called it.
Daniels
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
Fanning the flames

Fed busts ignite states' rights debate


by George Ochenski

This week gun-toting agents from the Drug Enforcement Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and the Department of Homeland Security raided medicinal cannabis operations across the state, and it's left tens of thousands of our citizens wondering just what the hell's going on in good old Montana. While details of why the raids were launched remain extremely sparse, a plethora of possibilities are flying around. One thing seems certain, however: such Draconian actions by the federal government will only fan the flames of the nationwide states' rights debate.
At first glance, the statewide raids would appear to be a hard-core federal crackdown on those who are providing cannabis to patients under Montana's citizen-approved Medical Marijuana Act, which garnered 62 percent of the popular vote in 2004. But there are a couple of very serious problems with this assumption.
Back in October 2009, President Obama announced that his administration would no longer raid growing facilities or prosecute patients in the 14 states that, at that time, had approved the use of medical cannabis. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder issued legal guidelines for federal attorneys accompanied by this statement: "It will not be a priority to use federal resources to prosecute patients with serious illnesses or their caregivers who are complying with state laws on medical marijuana."
That's a pretty unambiguous directive from their boss, so why did the federal agents seemingly ignore it this week? Some speculate that the answer might lie in the timing of the raids, which just happened to occur on the very day the Senate Judiciary Committee deadlocked on a bill to repeal the state's medical marijuana law.
But if that's the case, we have bigger problems than federal agents ignoring the wishes of the president and attorney general. Some think it's a blatant attempt to influence the outcome of state legislation.
"Coincidence? We think not," says Tom Daubert, who was instrumental in the passage of the law and leads the pro-cannabis group Patients and Families United. "Thousands of legitimate, honorable Montana patients all over the state will now suffer unnecessarily, possibly for months on end, because the medicine that had been grown and the plants that were growing for them have now been destroyed. This massive, heavy-handed federal intrusion appears to directly contradict the Obama administration's policy on medical marijuana states' rights and to be timed and calculated deliberately to interfere with and to influence local decision-making in Montana on medical marijuana issues."
Some, however, think the federal government may be making a statement that is much larger than just medical cannabis. Consider, for instance, the bills in the current legislature to "nullify" any number of federal laws. Or how about the bills to make firearms and ammunition manufactured and used in Montana exempt from federal firearms regulation? Is it possible that the feds, through this show of force, are letting those trying to trump federal law know that Washington will not tolerate it?
Or, taking it up a notch, perhaps the federal government has heard all it wants to hear from Gov. Brian Schweitzer. Not long ago, Schweitzer urged citizens to take the law into their own hands and kill wolves, saying state fish and wildlife wardens would not enforce the Endangered Species Act protections. That's inciting people to break federal law, and could be prosecuted, although that would be messy. Perhaps just a little shock and awe aimed toward cannabis growers was intended to get the message across more directly.
But the wolf issue isn't the only thing the governor has butted heads with the feds over lately. Just last month he issued an executive order banning the transportation of Yellowstone bison into Montana. The effect was to immediately shut down any possibility of trucking the animals to slaughter, thus requiring the feds to keep more than 500 bison in overcrowded pens on the park's border. Last week he suggested the "solution" to the bison problem was to "cull" bison within Yellowstone National Park—a concept that sent the new park superintendent into near convulsions as he imagined the national reaction.
Bringing it a little closer to the bone, the federal government is none too happy about Schweitzer's possession of a list containing the real cost of prescription drugs and the outrageous markup by the private middle men that are hosing Montana's citizens and straining state budgets. Those lists are, by federal law, confidential and may not be released to the public. Yet Schweitzer has urged news agencies to "sue the state" for their release. Is Big Pharma really powerful enough to send federal law enforcement agencies out to destroy the competition from homegrown medicinals like cannabis—or try to intimidate a governor who has urged citizens to go to Canada to obtain low-cost pharmaceuticals?
Speaking of confidential, the federal agents didn't just confiscate the plants, lights and packaged medicine from the caregivers. They also took their computers and cell phones. Montana law considers the files on medical cannabis patients confidential medical records. Yet now, the records of more than 30,000 Montanans who went through the steps to legally register with the state are in the hands of federal agents and will likely be added to federal computer files on hundreds of thousands of law-abiding Americans. They may well determine who gets to fly where, who gets searched and how often.
There are a lot more questions than answers as Montanans react to the raids and wonder what happened to our right of privacy under the Montana Constitution—or if these are the first shots fired in a much larger states' rights civil war. Sens. Jon Tester and Max Baucus and Rep. Denny Rehberg are in positions to get us some answers, and they'd best be doing so damn quick.
Helena's George Ochenski rattles the cage of the political establishment as a political analyst for the Independent. Contact Ochenski at opinion@missoulanews.com.
http://missoulanews.bigskypress.com/missoula/fanning-the-flames/Content?oid=1409340
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
Missoula Police Chief…

Marijuana and the Democracy Disconnect
Norm Stamper 34-year veteran police officer who retired as Seattle's chief of police in 2000

There is always a gap between what a political system stands for and the reality of everyday life under that system. Ours is government that ostensibly stands for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. A government of, by, and for the people. Yet, when it comes to marijuana, democratic principles take a back seat to fear, ignorance, and political expediency.

Look at New York, Montana, and the federal government for recent examples of how governments ignore or actively subvert the will of the people.

In his first run for elected office, Mayor Michael Bloomberg admitted to smoking and enjoying marijuana. His exercise of liberty, his pursuit of happiness obviously did nothing to damage his chances for election -- any more than it hurt the presidential candidacies of Bill Clinton (and running mate, Al Gore), George Bush, or Barack Obama.

Yet now in his third term, Mayor Bloomberg has presided over an astonishing 350,000 low-level marijuana arrests -- more than the combined total of such arrests under the Koch, Dinkins, and Giuliani administrations -- at an estimated cost of $350 million to $700 million. The human and social costs are incalculable. Almost 87 percent of arrestees are African Americans and Latinos, most are young, and most, we can extrapolate, are not wealthy.

This, despite the fact that the New York Marijuana Reform Act of 1977 decriminalized low-level possession cases.

In Montana, Missoula police chief Mark Muir is supporting a bill that would repeal that state's Medical Marijuana Act. Nothing wrong with a police chief taking a stand on laws that would, in his view, add to or subtract from public safety. No matter how irrational.

But there's something terribly wrong with a chief who informs the Montana Senate Judiciary Committee that, "The idea of dispensaries in the state of Montana has got to be something we wash out of our minds."

If Montana is experiencing problems with a delivery system that provides patients with much-needed medicine, it ought to create a sound regulatory system. But "wash [the idea] out of our minds"?

Speaking of brainwashing, Gil Kerlikowske, my successor as police chief in Seattle, now the nation's Drug Czar, called me to task in a recent Seattle visit for my suggestion that the Office of National Drug Control Policy is as zealously committed to prosecuting the War on Drugs as the Bush administration was. Kerlikowske took pains to remind me that he ended the drug war two years ago.
Say what?

Since Kerlikowske "ended" the drug war, law enforcement agencies continue to pile up record or near-record numbers of marijuana arrests.

As we, the people, make increasingly clear our intention to see marijuana legalized and regulated along the lines of alcohol, law enforcement comes down harder and harder on nonviolent, low-level offenders.

There is hope.

Seattle, whose voters in 2003 made minor marijuana possession cases the city's lowest enforcement priority, is one jurisdiction that gets it. The law is being respected by the local police. Seattle's city attorney, Pete Holmes, won't prosecute such cases. The chair of the city council's public safety committee, Tim Burgess (a former Seattle police officer), joined Holmes and former U. S. Attorney John McCay in Olympia this week to argue for marijuana legalization and regulation.

And in a completely unexpected editorial, the Seattle Times, which until very recently had argued consistently against marijuana legalization, came out in support of it.

The people of New York and Montana, and every other city and state in the union, who believe marijuana prohibition should be replaced with regulation must rise up and say no to those mayors, police chiefs, and other officials who insist on undermining the will of the people.

Oh, and someone needs to tell the drug czar the war ain't over just because he says it is.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/norm-stamper/marijuana-and-the-democra_b_838042.html
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
The two Super Skunk are really showing flowering kicking in. They are on 13/11. They should be good. Their mothers are drying for some trimming later this week.
Daniels

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Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
Here they are today after a rain yesterday. I made a batch to feed them tomorrow so they wick up the nutes. I made a 1/4 tsp. Jack's/Gallon. They'll only need a quart between both so I'll use the rest for the two mothers DX & RK.
Tops both look good just the bottom leaves still not looking better. This is a finicky strain to all others I've seen.
Daniels

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Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
So those of you have followed my threads you might remember I give myself an injection on Sunday nights. It is an interferon for the M.S. with a side effect of flu like symptoms. Sometimes it is worse than others. I blame weather for some of it.
So this morning I felt pretty good.:-P I get a cup of coffee and start checking out threads. I get an e-mail from my Caregiver about an article in the local newpaper. I almost choked laughing. Karma is a cruel Bitch. I almost freaked out with Brother Zabawa's last sentence.
Comments welcome.
Daniels:weed:

Profits, principles mixed in medical marijuana debate
By ED KEMMICK Of The Gazette Staff* The Billings Gazette |Posted: Monday, March 21, 2011 12:00 am


The owner of a large medical marijuana business says two prominent opponents of medical marijuana were willing to take his money when he was getting started in the business.
Mark Higgins said Rep. James Knox, R-Billings, an outspoken supporter of repealing the law that legalized medical marijuana, was a friend of his who helped create a website domain for his business, Billings Medical Marijuana.
About the same time, in the fall of 2009, Steve Zabawa, a prominent member of Safe Community, Safe Kids, which launched a campaign to support repeal, was willing to lease him space in a warehouse Zabawa owned, Higgins said.
“I turned him down because he wanted a 10 percent share of my business,” Higgins said.
Neither Knox nor Zabawa denies having had business dealings with Higgins, but both men said their initially benign views of medical marijuana changed after the medical cannabis industry clearly got out of hand in Montana.
Zabawa said it was true he proposed taking a portion of Higgins’ profits in addition to base rent, which he called a typical arrangement when a property owner leases space to a retailer. He also said Higgins, who was then expanding from a home operation, had little money at the time.
Zabawa said Higgins “wasn’t very attentive to details” and didn’t respond to Zabawa’s offer, but “just disappeared” for a while. By the time Higgins did make contact again, Zabawa said, he and his wife had decided they wanted nothing to do with a marijuana business, economically or morally.
Knox, for his part, said he had known Higgins even before they both ran for the City Council in 2009, and he wasn’t overly concerned about the nature of his business when Higgins asked him to do some work for him. Knox, who owns KBS Computer Solutions, created a domain name for Higgins and charged him $600.
Of that, Knox said, he received less than $200. Rather than pursue the issue, he said, “I gave it to him at cost as a friend.”
Knox said that if he looked into the political and religious background of every client, he’d never get any work done. Even so, he said, after learning more about “the insincerity of the medical marijuana providers,” he decided not to do business with any of them.
Higgins released information about his dealings with Knox and Zabawa earlier this week to Montanafesto, a blog that bills itself as being devoted to nonpartisan Montana political commentary. The website, which apparently is run by at least four anonymous bloggers, has been very critical of both Knox and Safe Community, Safe Kids.
“I was just tired of all the lies going around,” Higgins said, in explaining why he released the information. “Enough is enough.”
Besides having run for City Council, Higgins served on the medical marijuana committee created by the council in 2009 to propose local regulations for the medical marijuana industry.
After looking at Zabawa’s property on Daniels Street, Higgins ended up leasing a building at 116 N. 11th St. and opening his business last April. It operates under the name Montannabis as well as Billings Medical Marijuana.
Higgins said he is a caregiver for between 200 and 300 medical marijuana patients and has about 300 plants growing in his 4,500-square-foot building, tended by four employees. He boasted that Montannabis currently offers 70 different strains of medical marijuana, more than any other provider in the state.
Higgins said he and Knox were good friends who went hunting together. He said Knox admitted having smoked and sold marijuana when he lived in California.
Knox said he has never tried to hide the fact that he experimented with alcohol and a variety of drugs in his youth, but he said he stopped using drugs when his daughter was born. He also said marijuana ruined the life of his brother, who has used it steadily since he started smoking pot in the fifth grade.
Asked if he, Knox, ever sold marijuana, Knox said, “No, not that I can recall.”
Knox was not happy when Higgins posted a private email on the Montanafesto blog. He said the email had a liability disclaimer attached to it, stating that the communication “may contained privileged and/or confidential information.”
After Knox saw the posting on Montanafesto, he sent Higgins another email pointing out the liability disclaimer and adding, “My lawyer will be contacting you to resolve this matter.”
Zabawa said that when he was talking with Higgins about leasing his warehouse in the fall of 2009, “that was the very beginning of my learning process.”
He said he, like many other Montanans, initially thought medical marijuana was a reasonable option for people with severe medical problems, like late-stage cancer or HIV-AIDS.
But the explosion of the industry has dramatically increased the availability of marijuana, he said, making it far easier to obtain, particularly among young people. Also influencing his views, he said, was the death of his brother-in-law of lung cancer, after smoking pot for 35 years, and his own child’s abuse of marijuana. Zabawa said his child is now off the drug, healthy and happy.
And though Zabawa favors repeal of the medical marijuana law, he said he also supports decriminalizing the possession of less than an ounce of marijuana by people with narrowly defined, serious medical conditions.
It would be illegal to grow and sell marijuana, Zabawa said, but not to possess it for truly deserving people. How would they obtain their marijuana?
“I would bet there would be some good people out there willing to meet their needs,” he said.
Contact Ed Kemmick at [email protected] or 657-1293.
 

SensiStan

Well-Known Member
I love stoners, we're all frustrated with how easy the world could be. I hope you've heard of The Zeitgeist Movement Daniels, if not it might be something to look at :bigjoint: your plants are looking gd as always mate im dying to get things going here aswell, until then im just ogling everyone elses grows :weed:
 

Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
OK guys, I got the 1 gallon pots ready for up-canning tomorrow. I'm gonna top them for 4 Colas.
I'm gonna clone the top of #2. It's the Indica pheno. of the two. I'll ditch the Sativa pheno.'s potential clone. #2 stretched from the soil level to the cotyledons so I'll bury it deeper than #1. I also got the peat pot ready for the cloning in a few days.
#1 has some growth under it's cotyledon. It got some wind while I adjusted a new fan, so it's leaning a bit. It has a sprout, but it must be from the alfalfa hay.
Daniels

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Danielsgb

Well-Known Member
I got them up-canned into the 1 gal. pots. That bottom of 1 has the lower growth still coming along. 2 is buried deeper in the air pot. I'll top and feed soon.
Daniels

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