mhz
Well-Known Member
My season began last November (I got impregnated weed from a relative) and I chosen the best looking beans out of the bunch, germinating them in a enclosed greenhouse made out of water bottles. I have some autos growing in this fashion; I'll post pics to show y'all what I'm talking about. I started out with nine seedlings and only two survived the winter. I picked out the genetically superior plants, because four seedlings died, two became male, one herm, and two females. They both show characteristics of being Sativa dom. One has a sweet skunk scent and the other smells like lemon/salt.
I let them grow in the water bottle green house until they reached a little over a ft. Around the first week of January I transplanted them into 5 gallon buckets. I lollipop'd them and buried the main stem, making sure the root ball was a few inches from the bottom of the bucket. That foot of stem pretty much becomes the tap root, expelling tons of roots throughout the 5 gallon bucket. They survived the upper 30's to mid 40's nights without any problems.
The few inches of vegetation sticking out of the dirt was then mainlined, and grown to about a foot above the soil line around mid-may. Last week I transplanted one into the a 100 gallon hole. This week I'm going to transplant the other female into a 200 gallon hole. I will post pictures of my ladies in their final homes.
I amended the soil with cow manure, guano, and compost. I live next to a cow pasture, so I have an endless supply of cow shit, and I also have an endless source of bat guano. I store the guano and cow manure in black trash bags, until it fully decomposes. I make compost and guano sun tea for the girls. I mulched the bed with dead leaves from the fall, and placed good sized logs over the mulch to help retain moist and regulate soil temps.
You are pretty much all caught up with my first outdoor grow. I plan on post pictures as soon as possible, so sub-in for an epic season.
I let them grow in the water bottle green house until they reached a little over a ft. Around the first week of January I transplanted them into 5 gallon buckets. I lollipop'd them and buried the main stem, making sure the root ball was a few inches from the bottom of the bucket. That foot of stem pretty much becomes the tap root, expelling tons of roots throughout the 5 gallon bucket. They survived the upper 30's to mid 40's nights without any problems.
The few inches of vegetation sticking out of the dirt was then mainlined, and grown to about a foot above the soil line around mid-may. Last week I transplanted one into the a 100 gallon hole. This week I'm going to transplant the other female into a 200 gallon hole. I will post pictures of my ladies in their final homes.
I amended the soil with cow manure, guano, and compost. I live next to a cow pasture, so I have an endless supply of cow shit, and I also have an endless source of bat guano. I store the guano and cow manure in black trash bags, until it fully decomposes. I make compost and guano sun tea for the girls. I mulched the bed with dead leaves from the fall, and placed good sized logs over the mulch to help retain moist and regulate soil temps.
You are pretty much all caught up with my first outdoor grow. I plan on post pictures as soon as possible, so sub-in for an epic season.