Carport GreenHouse 2011

Moteasah

Active Member
I was thinking of stringing fishing lines in my hallway closet and doing them
In there. Stays pretty cool. Was also going to put a small occelating fan at the bottom of the closet just for circulation and pulling air in from the bottom space from the door.
 

mr.bond

Well-Known Member
I was thinking of stringing fishing lines in my hallway closet and doing them
In there. Stays pretty cool. Was also going to put a small occelating fan at the bottom of the closet just for circulation and pulling air in from the bottom space from the door.
Hey moteasah,

I would strongly recommend not having a fan or any air circulation where you dry. The air movement can wick the moisture away very quickly and in no time you'll end up with crumbs... just let them hang out in the dark for a week or so. Cheers mate-

mr. bond
 

Moteasah

Active Member
It was mainly going to be at the bottom by the crack in the door not even pointed at them but if you guys say no then no it is :). What the ideal temp and humidity you suggest? I can test the closet out ahead of time.
 

Corbat420

Well-Known Member
20 C or 68 F is the perfect temp for drying buds. keep humidity below 40%, i personaly like to use a dehumidifier and keep humidity from 25-35%, this makes it dry fast but not TO fast.
 

Hodgegrown

Well-Known Member
Morning JJ, The boys didn't stay the evening but we had dinner and shared in some herbs. They did a heck of a job getting me a fire break up at the cabin.
Your OG is bigger than mine, guess I'm all back of the bus now...LOL Good job Double JJ..:hump:
 

treemansbuds

Well-Known Member
Morning JJ, The boys didn't stay the evening but we had dinner and shared in some herbs. They did a heck of a job getting me a fire break up at the cabin.
Your OG is bigger than mine, guess I'm all back of the bus now...LOL Good job Double JJ..:hump:
.......and a slice of Blackberry pie!
Hey jj, Hodge kick us down some of that smoked Salmon....yummm! Good stuff there brother, thanks!
TMB-
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Hey treeman, sorry I couldn't meet-up while you were thru here, but you went thru faster than a band of gypsies! I would have given you some salmon personally, I'm glad you liked it. Now I'm out, so I have a good reason to go salmon fishing again!:-o
Glad you had a good trip, I know Hodge really appreciates it, & she does make the best blackberrie pie!:clap:

No Hodge, your still in the front of the bus, your OG will out produce mine & I know it!:-P

peace
doublejj
 

tybo911

Member
Nice thats a huge stock im jealous! some of mine are that big but just from wind damage, it looks like a 2 inch pipe threw a soft ball. Lol
 

Jozikins

Well-Known Member
Oh man JJ I've missed too much while I was away.I almost shat when I saw that elephant's foot! In speaking of which I just got some Duck's Foot clones, ever heard of it? Apparently it's a big thing up north for outdoor growers.

Those drying racks look great, I may try those out one day, I have never personally cured in turkey bags but I know a few people that do. I tried it for a week but I wasn't happy with the results, I probably should have waited longer. I'm not fortunate enough to have a big full basement (extremely jealous) but I am fortunate enough to have a very small basement I was able to build a 4x8 grow room in, and I feel like hot shit. Nobody has a basement in so cal; nobody!
 

anomolies

Well-Known Member
Heya, nice trees. Got a few questions for ya JJ if you don't mind

1) What soil/amendments are you using? (if you don't wanna share it that's fine. Just wondering if it's a special mix or store mix)

2) I remember your grow from last year, were those in the ground using the same soil?

3) How would you compare the size of the plants from this year compared with last? Smaller? Same?

I grow in coco outdoors in containers but I'm contemplating the switch back to soil and deciding the most cost effective way to do it. If I were to go with something like Subcool's SS recipe, running about $150-$200 per 100 gal container sized plant. (currrently my cost is less than $20 per plant)
 
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