First Grow. First Harvest. First Smoke.

Lady of Sussex

Active Member
My husband and I are brand new growers. For our first grow, we made the inexperienced decision to grow three different auto strains from ILGM’s Autoflower Supermix (GG, BB, and GSC) at the same time, just because we had them. We didn’t take into consideration that each strain might mature on a slightly different schedule, which happened. We decided that to accommodate the schedules, we’d just by a smaller tent for drying, so that worked out.

Last week we harvested Gorilla Glue and put it in to dry. Evidently, our RH is a little low because it dried fast. Newbie mistake. We also dry trimmed it in the Vivosun 19" bowl trimmer, which hacked it up. Not sure what went wrong. But I had trimmed all of the fan leaves already, so we decided to sift it and sneak a smoke of it before curing, just as an experiment. It was surprisingly smooth. AND POTENT!!! Like, one-hit wonder potent! I’m wondering if light curing of that will end up smokeable. The actual trim is being decarbed for edibles. (I ended up with about a half ounce of decent bud, 1 1/2 ounces of the sifted trim, and two ounces of actual decarb trim.) For a first try, I’d say that was a success.

The second plant, Bruce Banner, was harvested four days ago and we wet trimmed it. Much better. Some nice looking buds. 1 1/2 ounces of dried bud, 1 1/2 ounces of dried trim. The bud is curing now and the trim will be decarbed. I haven’t smoked it yet, but will likely try a pre-cure “cheater sample” tonight.

Girl Scout Cookie lives on. I’m thinking she has about two more days. She’s a lot more delicate as a plant, but full of buds. I’ll give her 24 hours of darkness and then chop her. Looking forward to seeing the results.

So, from a newbie perspective, this was successful, but I did learn some lessons.
  1. Growing is the easy part. Good soil, good seeds, good environment (tent, lights, humidity, temperature), the right amount of water (we used all distilled), the right pH, balanced nutes, and controlling what you can control. That’s not hard. You just “do” it. (By the way, we had a power outage for four days in week three of our grow, so had to take the plants out and put them in a window, but also had to make sure they were warm, because temperatures were in the 20s, so window in our living room with the fireplace going.)
  2. Knowing when to harvest is harder. Like, what is “milky” and what is “clear”. We watched a LOT of videos. Patience was a virtue for us. We REALLY wanted to get to the smoking part, but left them for extra time to be sure. Based on GG, it paid off.
  3. Knowing what to do after you chop 'em down is harder. Wet trim, dry trim, by hand or mechanically. There are so many conflicting opinions, videos, etc. We learned. And we will continue to learn.
  4. “I want to do this cheap” is not an option. Well, it may be for some, but having the right equipment makes it a lot less labor intensive. I mean, it’s all a bit of a science experiment. We started with a clone that someone gave us, used one of the cheap lights off Amazon, and killed it within a month. Oops! When we dug in here and in other forums, we learned a lot before putting a seed in the ground. (We had our seeds for a month before doing anything with them.) We figure that we have recouped all of our investment in the first grow and still have 27 seeds. So, it all paid off and now all we’ll need is fresh soil, distilled water, and time. Starting our second grow after GSC is in jars.
  5. Speaking of the 27 seeds…we put 3 plants in a 2x4x72 tent. They fit, but it was a little tight with fans and humidity control. We are thinking of growing two of the same strain at a time, just for simplicity.
So, I guess a newbie can be successful. At least we FEEL successful. And, by the way, nothing beats the feeling of seeing that little taproot sprouting from the seed the very first time. It was like a Herald Trumpet sounding out “YOU’RE A FARMER NOW!”
And thanks to all of you experienced folks who lend advice, encouragement, and support to folks like me who didn’t know a cola from a trichome.
 

farmingfisherman

Well-Known Member
Thanks! It's interesting how the structure of each plant was so different. I'll let you know how it turns out!
What lights or light were you using? Nice work getting them through the power outage! I've vegged a plant inside with natural and supplemental lighting before, its not easy but I think its better for the plant specially if the plant is going to be finished outdoors.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Er3

Lady of Sussex

Active Member
What lights or light were you using? Nice work getting them through the power outage! I've vegged a plant inside with natural and supplemental lighting before, its not easy but I think its better for the plant specially if the plant is going to be finished outdoors.
We bought this package: https://www.spider-farmer.com/products/new-sf2000-led-grow-light-2x4-grow-tent-kits/

The biggest benefit was that we didn't have to guess at what we'd need to put it together.

I think we actually bought it from Factory Pure. I have no intention of growing outside for the time being, because we live in a wooded area and the "natural pests" (squirrels, chipmunks, and mostly DEER, or as I like to call them "venison on the hoof") love to decimate our plants. I wish they'd just eat the rosemary and garlic so they come out pre-seasoned! I wish I could grow effectively outdoors! Especially because it's legal where I live.
 

farmingfisherman

Well-Known Member
Hog wire panels will solve that deer problem. Real critters are the flying ones that you have really worry about! Highly recommend trying to grow at least one plant outdoors If you have a area you could do it in.
 

Jjgrow420

Well-Known Member
Congrats on a 'successful' harvest
I hope many more bountiful harvests are in your future. Good on you for learning some lessons and changing things to get results. Most people here just keep doing the same wrong things and wonder why it's not working! Welcome to growing community.
 

farmingfisherman

Well-Known Member
You don't think squirrels and raccoons would be a problem? They loved my tomato and zucchini plants!
I've never experienced any problems with them. I live in the city however so there is a greater variety of food available. Maybe grow two plants and mark one for the critters and one for you. I'm sure they will corporate. :D
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Bag the mechanical trimmer. Wet trim all fan leaves off. Then wait until the sugar leaves are crunchy and crush them into a can. Save your trim always. Bubble hash or budder or something.
 

Unga Bunga

Well-Known Member
Deer mainly , but rabbits , woodchucks and field mice can mess you up . Either chop them down or girdle them . A wire fence can stop most . The taller the better and if you can bury it a few inches do it .

In 42 years myself and my friends have actually never worried much about bugs . Really never had to . The worms here and there but nothing bad .
 

Lady of Sussex

Active Member
Nice! From your post I'd say you were!
Well, we smoked the Gorilla Glue that got mangled and it was spectacular, if I may say so myself.

Bruce Banner is dry enough now and we'll be tasting that tonight.

And the Girl Scout Cookie (wet trimmed very nicely) should be dry in a few days.

All in all, I am very happy with the outcome, especially for the first try. And especially because I'm known for NOT having a green thumb!
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Do you even grow outdoors in Alaska? I would think your season would be very short, although the days would be very long. Seriously a curiosity question.
Autos try to finish outdoors. Otherwise I veg until freeze and bring big plants indoors. I have to top and continuously supercrop to keep them manageable. Plus multiple cuttings taken in our 100 day growing season.
 
Top