I Know These Question's May Sound Dumb, But I Need Help To Grow Some Bud.

MegaSmoke

Member
How do I grow some bud outdoors without buying anything? I have soil obviously, water, pots, and Reggie Marijuana seeds. I got a red cup, and put some soil in it, and took a seed that had a little white 'root' out of it. Well the seed had a VERY tiny 'root' on it. So about a inch into the cup, I put that seed in it. I put some water in it also. Will it grow? Should I go take the seed out? Should I plant more? What should I do??
-Sorry for all the questions, Im a Beginner..
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
My best advice at this stage is "read a book". The other is to plant seeds one at a time, make mistakes, learn from them, keep planting ... until you and the plant have worked out a modus vivendi. cn
 

MysticMorris

Active Member
Sounds like you have the main ingredients, nurture the seedling indoors for a few weeks under a small cfl then put it outside under the sun.Now you have germinated the seed you cant un-germinate it. Two options are throw yourself in at the deep end and keep growing it (and like Cn says best get a book or guide that covers all the basics), or option 2 - execute the seed.

Oh and sure the seed should pop soil soon, an inch is quite deep to plant it but it should be able to push up fine. Carefull not to water the soil too much as there are no plant roots yet to wick the water up.
 

racerboy71

bud bootlegger
go to the newbie section of this site.. go to the top left side where it says forum, click on that, then go the newbie section.. i would start with all of the stickied threads, probably starting with 101 already asked questions, as it's a really informative read that answers tons of question you may have..

also, you can go to the grow journal section on this site and just pick a grow that sounds good, and follow along with it.. grow journals are a great place to see how others are doing it, what issues they may have run into and how they over came them imo..

the grow bible by jorge cervante's is a pretty good book as well, it's a bit old and some of the info can be a little outdated, but it will still teach you tons about growing cannabis..
 

Vindicated

Well-Known Member
It's to late to get a decent grow going outside. Your best chance is to build an indoor setup for around $200-$300. If you want to practice outside and expect to get more seeds in by March, you could build a 3'x3' *(or bigger) raised bed. It only needs to be 6" deep. Shop around for deals on soil. Stick with organic with no added fertilizers. All the nutrients should come in the form of manure, castings, and compost. Over here on the west coast I use Kellogg Patio Plus. It's only $4 a bag and about 6 bags is enough to fill a raised bed.

While your at it, get some peas, and carrot seeds. Then divide your raised bed into fours. Leave one section of your cannabis plant, one section for a dozen carrots, and one section for 2-3 pea plants. The fourth spot can be your compost corner. The carrots will make a good hiding place for predator insects and the peas will add nitrogen to the soil, so you won't have to feed as much. The compost area is where you bury all the dead leaves. After your harvest, smoke and eat what you want and compost the rest in your special compost area.

Come March, start all over, except this time, you want to plant your cannabis seed where the peas where, and the carrots where your cannabis was, and so on. This is called crop rotation. It makes your soil last longer, prevents pathogens from getting out of control, and will help you learn all the skills needed to care for any type of plant. Doing it this way should also teach you just how little fertilizer you actually need. In most cases you can avoid fertilizing all together. Worst case, you'll have to spend $8 on an all-purpose organic slow release fertilize that will last you 2-3 years.
 

dimebong

Well-Known Member
You can't expect everyone to do your work for you. Go read a guide, then read around this site like everyone else.
 

nick17gar

Well-Known Member
google is your friend

RIU is your best friend, fuck google.

Go onto the forums and read the STICKIES, stick to the first 3 forums, general marijuana growing, noobie central, and my favorite, marijuana plant problems.

the info in just the stickies in these 3 will be more then enough to make you a proficient grower.

if you do use google, add in the words rollitup to find it on this site, and be able to link back to it, or subscribe to it a lot easier then if its on some random, lame, less used, more dated site.
 

nick17gar

Well-Known Member
It's to late to get a decent grow going outside. Your best chance is to build an indoor setup for around $200-$300. If you want to practice outside and expect to get more seeds in by March, you could build a 3'x3' *(or bigger) raised bed. It only needs to be 6" deep. Shop around for deals on soil. Stick with organic with no added fertilizers. All the nutrients should come in the form of manure, castings, and compost. Over here on the west coast I use Kellogg Patio Plus. It's only $4 a bag and about 6 bags is enough to fill a raised bed.

While your at it, get some peas, and carrot seeds. Then divide your raised bed into fours. Leave one section of your cannabis plant, one section for a dozen carrots, and one section for 2-3 pea plants. The fourth spot can be your compost corner. The carrots will make a good hiding place for predator insects and the peas will add nitrogen to the soil, so you won't have to feed as much. The compost area is where you bury all the dead leaves. After your harvest, smoke and eat what you want and compost the rest in your special compost area.

Come March, start all over, except this time, you want to plant your cannabis seed where the peas where, and the carrots where your cannabis was, and so on. This is called crop rotation. It makes your soil last longer, prevents pathogens from getting out of control, and will help you learn all the skills needed to care for any type of plant. Doing it this way should also teach you just how little fertilizer you actually need. In most cases you can avoid fertilizing all together. Worst case, you'll have to spend $8 on an all-purpose organic slow release fertilize that will last you 2-3 years.

i gotta say, thats pretty pro ^
 
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