Marijuana has been grown in a clandestine manner by a great many growers for a long time.

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
From 420 Magazine...


Marijuana has been grown in a clandestine manner by a great many growers for a long time.

Despite that, an optimal way of cultivating the plant to boost its medicinal properties has not be found, says a University of Guelph plant scientist who is leading the charge to perfect pot growing.

Mike Dixon and his research team in the University of Guelph's controlled environmental system research facility and program, has received $210,000 from Ontario Centres of Excellence. The money will fund the application of new irrigation technology to medical cannabis growing. It's a process by which small sensors are strapped to the stem of a plant and hooked up to a wireless data logger that measures the water status of the plant every 15 minutes.

But that is just one component of ongoing work being done by Dixon on cannabis.

The work is in partnership with Napanee-based ABcann Medicinals, and will be carried out in ABcann's Napanee facilities. Due to regulatory restrictions cannabis can't be grown on campus without first going through a lengthy research licensing process.

The controlled environmental system research facility is a precisely controlled plant growth environment that carefully measures things such as plant growth rates, nutrient remediation and organic compounds.

Dixon is known for his extensive work over the past 20 years on the use of plants as biological life support in space travel. He has worked with multiple international space agencies and companies in the aerospace sector. His team is also working on plant-based cancer drugs with Guelph-based PlantForm.

He said finding the best way to grow medical marijuana will involve a systematic and repeatable approach.

"This is just the leading edge of how the phytopharmaceutical sector must go," Dixon said. "It must approach the production of medicinal compounds in plants in this manner."

The work with ABcann Medicinals is much broader than the irrigation component.

"We have a very comprehensive research program in collaboration with ABcann Medicinals," said Dixon. "We're doing the whole environment control package, including the lighting systems, and the organic growing substrate that we're developing. We are looking at the plant in its entirety, its relationship to environment control systems, and how that ultimately defines the productivity in terms of the medicinal compounds of interest."

Dixon said there are many variations on the theme of growing pot, but no standardized method. Perfecting and standardizing production and quality is necessary if cannabis is to attain the stature of a high quality pharmaceutical commodity.

Gaining the capacity to grow the same drug every time is absolutely necessary, he said. And while there are strong genetics available to do that, the only way to produce a systematic, standardized product is through using repeatable, high quality environmental controls. Dixon said no one has achieved it yet. The task is a big one.

"The plain truth is that the environment controlled recipe, comprised of light intensity, light quality, temperature, humidity, nutrients, soil attributes … that recipe for specific commodities does not exist," he said.

"Every grower spawn by the decades of underground growing has their own recipe, but very little of it is proven in the cauldron of scientific research, with controlled experiments and objective assessments of the outcome, and detailed analysis of the medicinal compounds," he said.

 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
This is the title...

Perfect Pot? U Of Guelph Researchers Working To Grow Marijuana Optimally
 

ricky1lung

Well-Known Member
Don't tell some people that scientists still have things to learn and have the technology accessible to them so they can do so in labs.

Some people freak out when they hear stuff like that.
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
This is the title...

Perfect Pot? U Of Guelph Researchers Working To Grow Marijuana Optimally
More like designer pot. I'm not sure fine tuning the growing process is going to improve the benefits I get, but it may be beneficial for others. Any marijuana research is a good thing, imo - and buddy gets a sweet gig with a juicy grant.
 

Gmack420

Well-Known Member
Mike Dixon is smoking his own shit it seems, part of why it has not been standardized is because every strain is different, some do better hot, some cold, some wet, some dry, etc etc......... they can try to tame the lion all they want but it will never happen.
Don't tell that to <insert the biggest retard in the Canadian section who can't fucking grow worth a shit> he thinks the lab is the best place for mj. He thinks scientist have developed the mj we have today not home horticulturist. He also can't figure out why no one wants to buy mmj from lp's.
 

ricky1lung

Well-Known Member
Don't tell that to <insert the biggest retard in the Canadian section who can't fucking grow worth a shit> he thinks the lab is the best place for mj. He thinks scientist have developed the mj we have today not home horticulturist. He also can't figure out why no one wants to buy mmj from lp's.
Never said it was the best place, I said they could learn more.
It's funny to see everything you argue about become news stories and actually happen.

Never said they developed the mj we use today either. Not once.

Don't care if people buy from lp's, but I'm smart enough to know they're not gong anywhere.

So there ya go, more of your idiocy blown to bits.
 

torontoke

Well-Known Member
Research and taking away the nuclear waste stigma is an important step for mj. The more of these gov accepted facilities proving how safe the plant is will only help break down the walls put up by decades of reefer madness.
No longer will they be able to say there's no research.
I was under the impression that they have been growing in many universities for a few years now.
 

ricky1lung

Well-Known Member
Research and taking away the nuclear waste stigma is an important step for mj. The more of these gov accepted facilities proving how safe the plant is will only help break down the walls put up by decades of reefer madness.
No longer will they be able to say there's no research.
I was under the impression that they have been growing in many universities for a few years now.

I think there is plenty to learn. Research grants are great news for the mj community as a whole.

If they can find a way to automate the process and reproduce results, the methods could trickle down to home grows. The potential for new tech and methods is there.
 

torontoke

Well-Known Member
Most old school growers think that 5 gal hardware store buckets under 12/12 of 1000watts of hps is the only way to do things.
I don't think advancements only come from lab grows but they certainly mean more to the politicians and Drs than the illegal experiments they don't know about.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
Research and taking away the nuclear waste stigma is an important step for mj. The more of these gov accepted facilities proving how safe the plant is will only help break down the walls put up by decades of reefer madness.
No longer will they be able to say there's no research.
I was under the impression that they have been growing in many universities for a few years now.
UBC has a great program
 

tiktak1297

Well-Known Member
The goal is to create reproducible results. Whether they are optimal or not. So that your blue dream will always be 23% thc, whether it can do more or not. A standardized way of growing so that every strain will be predictable every time. And if a particular strain doesn't like the method it gets dumped. Tailor the strain to the method, not a different method to every strain. It's the future of commercial growing
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
The goal is to create reproducible results. Whether they are optimal or not. So that your blue dream will always be 23% thc, whether it can do more or not. A standardized way of growing so that every strain will be predictable every time. And if a particular strain doesn't like the method it gets dumped. Tailor the strain to the method, not a different method to every strain. It's the future of commercial growing
Sounds like a great way to get homogenized and shitty product.
 
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