Basic
instructions to start growing you must have good
seeds, some seedling soil, some small and large
pots and depending on whether you're growing
indoor or outdoor some lamps and all the toys
around them.
Soak the seeds in a cup of water overnight before
beginning the process of growing. First you may want to have some good
fertilized soil, preferably peat moss, and you may want to use a little bit of
miracle grow, which can be purchased at a low price at any plant shop. You must have either a
400 watt or 600 watt grow lamp. Soft white bulbs
will NOT work.
RATIO: 1 400 watt lamp = 1
squire meter of plants( +/- 25 plants). First up
you will need a small space. A wooden closet of
approximately 100*100*200cm would be good. This
size can be varied depending on the number of
plants but this is good for 25. Remember to make
sure that your lights will fit inside the closet.
The inside of this closet should be painted with
flat white paint or coated with aluminum foil (or
Mylar is you have it).
This will increase
reflectivity and will make your lights more
effective.
Now you need to put lights inside
the cabinet.
The optimum temperature is
27-30 C. It will probably be hotter than this so
cut a small ventilation hole (10cm*10cm) in the
top of the cabinet. Mount the lights vertically
with one in each corner, as close to the top of
the cabinet as possible. Mount the remaining light
on the roof of the cabinet. Wire all the lights
into one plug with enough cable to reach the
socket. This could be dangerous so get someone who
knows what they are doing to do it. Use an
appropriate fuse or better still, buy a circuit
breaker. Buy a timer. A standard and widely
available 24hr timer will be fine. These are
cheap. Get some potting soil from a garden center.
Sandy or loose soils are good soils for growing.
The exact soil is not all that important. With
enough light and nutrients you should have no
trouble getting good growth. If you can then
monitor soil pH
values.
Switch the lights on
and leave them on. Plant 10-15 seeds.
Water the
plants once a day and feed the plants twice a week
with a standard miracle grow product in the
water.
Try to use a high nitrogen plant food
during vegetative growth (at the start) and a low
nitrogen plant food during flowering.
When the
plants get to the height you want them (about 60cm
is good) set the timer for 12 hours of light and
12 of dark.
Only water once every two days
around the time when the lights come on.
This
will halt vertical growth and after a few weeks
the plants will start to show either male or
female characteristics.
Males: pollen
balls.
Females: stems and branches.
During
the dark periods absolutely no light should be
allowed in.
Cut out the males before they
release pollen.
Reduce the number of plants
down to the best 5 females.
These females will
now grow outwards.
The whole thing takes 4
months. 4-6 weeks in vegetative growth stage, 2
weeks differentiation to split males and females
and 8 weeks for the females to flower.
Harvest
when the large leaves begin to yellow and drop
off.
Cut the leaves off and let dry on a flat
surface.
Trim the leaf near the buds and hang
the buds to dry for about a week.
A book with pictures and
good detail is essential for serious
growing.
Growth space must be high enough to
allow growth to about 60cm (2-3ft). This requires
a space of about 100cm (4ft high). Twice this
height should be converted into a two level
growing space by inserting a shelf.
There
should be between 18inches and 2ft growing space
per plant. All of the inside of the growing space
should be coated with foil or painted with white
paint to increase reflectivity and improve light
efficiency.
More space than the minimum is
always best because good ventilation can greatly
improve growth rates.
Lighting
Fluorescent
tubes are named for the spectrum of light which
they emit. Some spectrums are more efficient than
others.
Deluxe warm white, warm white and
deluxe cool white are all conducive to good growth
and should be widely available.
All types of
growing light should have a reflector box around
them directing the light towards the
plants.
You should get the longest light that
will fit into your space and the highest wattage
you can find.
Screw-in grow bulbs are tempting
but highly inefficient.
Plant Pot
Size
A cannabis of 6"*6"*6" should
be perfect to support good growth.
One of these
per plant.
Organic Soil
Mixes
There are many different types of
soil mixes available and they are easy to obtain
from garden centers.
Two proven types
are:
-4 parts topsoil, 1 part peat moss, 1 part
vermiculite, 1 part perlite.
This is moist,
contains medium/high amounts of nutrients and is
best for hand watering systems.
-1 part worm
castings, 2 parts vermiculite, 1 part
perlite.
This is light-weight and high in
nutrients.
Fertilizer
The
main nutrients that a plant needs to grow are
Nitrogen, Phosphorous and Potassium. Most plant
fertilizers contain these elements and a good,
easily available, one is called Grow More.
If
you really want to then here are the some
effective ratios of the three elements to be used
through the two growth stages.
Early growth
stages: 7-9-5 or 5-10-5 or 4-5-3.
For the
flowering stages use 3-10-4 or 5-20-5 or
4-30-12.
It is best to build up the amount of
fertilizer you use to what is making the plants
look healthily green as too much fertilizer can
kill the plant.
Soil
pH Levels
Any pH level between 6 and 7
is fine but you should aim for as close to 6.5 as
possible.
Temperature
Aim
for 70 F. Anything higher than 75F will be too hot
and will damage growth. Make sure the water for
watering is luke-warm.
CANNABIS LIFE
CYCLE
Cannabis plants may belong to any
one of a number of varieties which follow somewhat
different growth patterns. The following outline
describes the more common form of growth.
Differences between varieties can be thought of as
variations on this standard theme.
Cannabis is
an annual plant. A single season completes a
generation, leaving all hope for the future to the
seeds. The normal life cycle follows the general
pattern described
below.
Germination
With
winter past, the moisture and warmth of spring
stir activity in the embryo. Water is absorbed and
the embryo's tissues swell and grow, splitting the
seed along its suture.
The radical or embryonic
root appears first. Once clear of the seed, the
root directs growth downward in response to
gravity. Meanwhile, the seed is being lifted
upward by growing cells which form the seedling's
stem.
Now anchored by the roots, and
receiving water and nutrients, the embryonic
leaves (cotyledons) unfold. They are a pair of
small, somewhat oval, simple leaves, now green
with chlorophyll to absorb the life-giving light.
Germination is complete. The embryo has been
reborn and is now a seedling living on the food it
produces through photosynthesis. The process of
germination is usually completed in three to 10
days.
Seedling
The second
pair of leaves begins the seedling stage. They are
set opposite each other and usually have a single
blade. They differ from the embryonic leaves by
their larger size, spearhead shape, and serrated
margins. With the next pair of leaves that
appears, usually each leaf has three blades and is
larger still.
A basic pattern has been set.
Each new set of leaves will be larger, with a
higher number of blades per leaf until, depending
on variety, they reach their maximum number, often
nine or 11.
The seedling stage is completed
within four to six
weeks.
Vegetative
Growth
This is the period of maximum
growth. The plant can grow no faster than the rate
that its leaves can produce energy for new growth.
Each day more leaf tissue is created, increasing
the overall capacity for growth.
With excellent
growing conditions, Cannabis has been known to
grow six inches a day, although the rate is more
commonly one to two inches.
The number of
blades on each leaf begins to decline during the
middle of the vegetative stage. Then the
arrangement of the leaves on the stem (phyllotaxy)
changes from the usual opposite to alternate. The
internodes (stem space from one pair of leaves to
the next, which had been increasing in length)
begin to decrease, and the growth appears to be
thicker. Branches which appeared in the axis of
each set of leaves grow and shape the plant to its
characteristic form. The vegetative stage is
usually completed in the third to fifth months of
growth.
Pre-flowering
This
is a quiescent period of one to two weeks during
which growth slows considerably. The plant is
beginning a new program of growth as encoded in
its genes. The old system is turned off and the
new program beings with the appearance of the
first
flowers.
Flowering
Cannabis
is dioecious: each plant produces either male or
female flowers, and is considered either a male or
female plant. Male plants usually start to flowers
about one month before the female; however, there
is sufficient overlap to ensure pollination. First
the upper internodes elongate; in a few days the
male flowers appear. The male flowers are quite
small, about 1/4 inch, and are pale green, yellow,
or red/purple. They develop in dense, drooping
clusters (cymes) capable of releasing clouds of
pollen dust.
Once pollen falls, males lose
vigor and soon die.
The female flowers
consists of two small (1/4 to 1/2 inch long),
fuzzy white stigmas raised in a V sign and
attached at the base to an ovule which is
contained in a tiny green pod. The pod is formed
from modified leaves (bracts and bracteoles) which
envelop the developing seed. The female flowers
develop tightly together to form dense clusters
(racemes) or buds, cones, or colas (in this book,
buds). The bloom continues until pollen reaches
the flowers, fertilizing them and beginning the
formation of seeds. Flowering usually lasts about
one or two months, but may continue longer when
the plants are not pollinated and there is no
killing frost.
Seed
Set
A fertilized female flower develops
a single seed wrapped in the bracts.
In thick
clusters, they form the seed-filled buds that make
up most fine imported cannabis.
After
pollination, mature, viable seeds take from 10
days to five weeks to develop. When seeds are
desired, the plant is harvested when enough seeds
have reached full color. For a fully-seeded plant
this often takes place when the plant has stopped
growth and is, in fact, dying. During flowering
and seed set, various colors may appear. All the
plant's energy goes to reproduction and the
continuance of its kind. Minerals and nutrients
flow from the leaves to the seeds, and the
chlorophyll's that give the plant its green color
disintegrate. The gold's, browns, and reds which
appear are from accessory pigments that formerly
had been masked by
chlorophyll.
About Plants
Generally
Plants use a fundamentally
different "life strategy" from animals. Animals
are more or less self-contained units that grow
and develop to predetermined forms. They use
movement and choice of behavior to deal with the
changing environments. Plants are organized more
as open systems - the simple physical
characteristics of the environment, such as
sunlight, water, and temperature, directly control
their growth, form, and life cycles.
Once the
seed sprouts, the plant is rooted in place and
time. Since growth is regulated by the
environment, development is on accordance with the
plant's immediate surroundings. When a balance is
struck, the strategy is a success and life
flourishes.
Behavior of a plant is not a
matter of choice; it is a fixed response. On a
visible level the response more often than not is
growth, either a new form of growth, or
specialized growth. By directly responding, plant
in effect "know," for example, when to sprout,
flower, or drop leaves to prepare for
winter.
Everyone has seen how a plant turns
toward light or can bend upward if it its stem is
bent down. The plant turns by growing cells of
different length on opposite sides of the stem.
This effect turns or right the plant.
The
stimulus in the first case is light, in the second
gravity, but essentially the plant responds by
specialized growth. It is the same with almost all
facets of a plant's live - growth is modified and
controlled by the immediate environment. The
influence of light, wind, rainfall, etc.,
interacts with the plant (its genetic make-up or
genotype) to produce the individual plant
(phenotype).
The life cycle of Cannabis is
usually complete in four to nine months. The
actual time depends on variety, but it is
regulated by local growing conditions,
specifically the photoperiod (length of day vs.
night).
Cannabis is a long-night (or
short-day) plant. When exposed to a period of two
weeks of long nights - that is, 13 or more hours
of continuous darkness each night - the plants
respond by flowering. This has important
implications, for it allows the grower to control
the life cycle of the plant and adapt it to local
growing conditions or unique situations. Since you
can control flowering, you control maturation and,
hence, the age of the plants at
harvest.
PHOTOPERIOD
AND FLOWERING
For the cannabis grower
the most important plant/environment interaction
to understand is the influence of the photoperiod.
The photoperiod is the daily number of hours of
day (light) vs. night (dark). In nature, long
nights signal the plant that winter is coming and
that it is time to flowers and produce seeds. As
long as the day-length is long, the plants
continue vegetative growth. If female flowers do
appear, there will only be a few. These flowers
will not form the characteristic large clusters or
buds. If the days are too short, the plants
flowers too soon, and remain small and
underdeveloped.
The plant "senses" the
longer nights by a direct interaction with light.
A flowering hormone is present during all stages
of growth. This hormone is sensitive to light and
is rendered inactive by even low levels of light.
When the dark periods are long enough, the
hormones increase to a critical level that
triggers the reproductive cycle. Vegetative growth
ends and flowering begins.
The natural
photoperiod changes with the passing of seasons.
In the Northern Hemisphere, the length of daylight
is longest on June 21. Day-length gradually
decreases until it reaches its shortest duration
on December 22.
The duration of daylight then
begins to increase until the cycle is completed
the following June 21.
Because the Earth is
tilted on its axis to the sun, day-length also
depends on position (or latitude) on Earth. As one
moves closer to the equator, changes in the
photoperiod are less drastic over the course of a
year. At the equator (0 degrees altitude) day
length lasts about 12.5 hours on June 21 and 11.5
hours on December 22. In Maine (about 45 degrees
north), day-length varies between about 16 and
nine hours. Near the Arctic Circle on June 21
there is no night. On December 22 the whole day is
dark. The longer day-length toward the north
prevents cannabis from flowering until later in
the season. Over most of the northern half of the
country, flowering is often so late that
development cannot be completed before the onset
of cold weather and heavy frosts.
The
actual length of day largely depends on local
conditions, such as cloud cover, altitude, and
terrain. On a flat Midwest plain, the effective
length of day is about 30 minutes longer than
sunrise to sunset. In practical terms, it is
little help to calculate the photoperiod, but it
is important to realize how it affects the plants
and how you can use it to you
advantage.
Cannabis generally needs about two
weeks of successive long nights before the first
flowers appear. The photoperiod necessary for
flowering will vary slight with
(1) the
variety, (2) the age of the plant, (3) its sex,
and (4) growing conditions.
1. Cannabis
varieties originating from more northerly climes
(short growing seasons) react to as little as nine
hours of night. Most of these are hemp and seed
varieties that are acclimated to short growing
seasons, such as the weedy hemp's of Minnesota or
southern Canada. Varieties from more southerly
latitudes need longer nights with 11 to 13 hours
of darkness. Since most cannabis plants are
acclimated to southerly latitudes, they need the
longer nights to flower.
To be on the safe
side, if you give Cannabis plant dark periods of
13 or more hours, each night for two weeks, this
should be enough to trigger flowering.
2.
The older a plant (the more physiologically
developed), the quicker it responds to long
nights. Plants five or six months old sometimes
form visible flowers after only four long nights.
Young cannabis plants (a month or so of age) can
take up to four weeks to respond to long nights of
16 hours.
3. Both male and female Cannabis
are long-night plants. Both will flower when given
about two weeks of long nights. The male plant,
however, will often flower fully under very long
days (18 hours) and short nights (six hours).
Males often flowers at about the same time they
would if they were growing in their original
environment. For most cannabis plants this occurs
during the third to fifth month.
4. Growing
conditions affect flowering in many ways (see
Chapter 12). Cool temperatures (about 50F) slow
down the flowering response. Cool temperatures or
generally poor growing conditions affect flowering
indirectly. Flower development is slower, and more
time is needed to reach full bloom. Under adverse
conditions, female buds will not develop to full
size.
Applications of
Photoperiod
The photoperiod is used to
manipulate the plants in two basic ways:
1.
By giving long dark periods, you can force plants
to flower.
2. By preventing long nights, using
artificial light to interrupt the dark period, you
can force the plants to continue vegetative
growth.
Outdoors
Most
cannabis plants cultivated in the United States
begin to flower by late August to early October
and the plants are harvested from October to
November. For farmers in the South, parts of the
Midwest, and West Coast, this presents no problem
and no special techniques and instructions are
needed for normal flowering.
In much of the
North and high-altitude areas, many varieties will
not have time to complete flowering before fall
frosts. To force the plants to flower earlier,
give them longer night periods. If the plants are
in containers, you can simply move them into a
darkened area each evening.
Plants growing
in the ground can be covered with an opaque
tarpaulin, black sheet plastic, or double or
triple-layers black plastic trash bags. Take
advantage of any natural shading because direct
sunlight is difficult to screen completely. For
instance, if the plants are naturally shaded in
the morning hours, cover the plants each evening
or night. The next morning you uncover the plants
at about eight to nine o'clock. Continue the
treatment each day until all the plants are
showing flowers. This usually takes two weeks at
most, is the plants are well developed (about four
months old). For this reason, where the season
starts late, it is best to start the plants
indoors or in cold frames and transplant outdoors
when the weather is mild. This in effect lengthens
the local growing season and gives the plants
another month or two to develop.
By the end
of August the plants are physiologically ready to
flower; they sometimes do with no manipulation of
the photoperiod. More often female plants show a
few flowers, but the day-length prevents rapid
development to large clusters. The plants seem in
limbo - caught between vegetative growth and
flowering. The natural day-length at this time of
year will not be long enough to reverse the
process, so you can discontinue the treatment when
you see that the new growth is predominantly
flowers.
In areas where frosts are likely to
occur by early October, long-night treatments may
be the only way you can harvest good-sized flower
clusters. These clusters, or buds, are the most
potent plant parts and make up the desired
harvest. Forcing the plants to flowers early also
means development while the weather is warm and
the sun is shining strongly.
The flower
buds will form much faster, larger and reach their
peak potency. A good time to start the treatments
is early to middle August. This allows the plants
at least four weeks of flowering while the weather
is mild.
Another reason you may want to do this
is to synchronize the life cycle of the plants
with the indigenous vegetation. In the northeast
and central states, the growing season ends quite
early and much of the local vegetation dies back
and changes color. Any cannabis plants stick out
like green thumbs, and the crop may get ripped off
or busted. Plants treated with long nights during
late July will be ready to harvest in
September.
Outdoor growers should always
plant several varieties, because some may
naturally flower early, even in the northern-most
parts of the country. These early-maturing
varieties usually come from Mexican, Central
Asian, and homegrown sources. By planting several
varieties, many of you will be able to find or
develop an early-maturing variety after a season
or two. This, of course, is an important point,
because it eliminates the need for long-night
treatments.
Preventing
Flowers
Manipulation of the photoperiod
can also prevent the plants from flowering until a
desired time. For example, in Hawaii the weather
is mild enough to grow winter crops. The normal
summer crop is harvested anytime from September to
mid-November. The winter crop is generally planted
from October to December. Because the winter days
are so short, the plants flower almost
immediately, usually within two month. The plants
are harvested in their third or fourth month and
yield about 1/4 the yield of summer
plants.
A large Hawaiian female can yield a
pound of buds. Most of the plant's overall size is
reached while it is vegetatively growing. By
interrupting the night period with light, you can
keep these plants vegetatively growing for another
month, yielding plants of about twice the
size.
The amount of light needed to prevent
flowering is quite small (about .03 foot candles95
- on a clear night the full moon is about .01 foot
candles). However, each plant mist is illuminated
fully, with the light shining over the whole
plant.
This might be accomplished with
either electric light or a strong flashlight. The
easiest way is to string incandescent bulbs,
keeping them on a timer. The lights need be turned
on for only a flash at any time during the night
period, from about 9:00 PM to about 3:00 am. The
interrupts the long night period to less then nine
hours. Start these night treatments each night or
two, until you want the plants to
flower.
Indoors
Instructions
Natural
Light.
The growing season lasts all year.
The night period is much easier to control.
Sometimes people grow plants in their windows for
more than a year without any female flowers ever
forming. This is because household lamps are
turned on sometime at night, illuminating the
plants. Under natural light exclusively, indoor
plants flower at about the same time they would
outdoors (sometime a bit sooner because it is
warmer indoors or the plants may be
shaded).
When plants are well developed and
you want them to flower, make sure that no
household lamps or nearby street lamps are shining
on them. During late fall and winter, the natural
day-length is short enough for the plants to
flower naturally, if you simply keep off any
lights at night that are in the same room as the
plants. If you must use light, use the lowest
wattage possible, such as a six-watt bulb. (The
hormone is also least sensitive to blue light.)
Shield the light away from the plants. Or shield
the plants from any household light with aluminum
foil curtains.
Once the flowers are forming
clusters, you can discontinue the dark treatments,
especially if it is more convenient. However, if
it is too soon (when you see only a few random
flowers), household lights can reverse the
process.
By using natural light, you can grow
indoor crops all year. The winter light is weak
and the days are short, so it is best to use
artificial lights to supplement daylight, as well
as to extend the photoperiod. The extra light will
increase the growth rate of the plants and hence
size and yield. You should allow winter crops to
flower during late January or February, using the
natural photoperiod to trigger flowering. If you
wait until spring, the natural light period will
be too long and may prevent
flowering.
Artificial Light
Instructions
Under artificial light the
photoperiod is, of course, any length you wish.
The most popular way to grow with artificial
lights is the harvest system. Start the plants
under long light periods of from 16 to 18 hours
daily. After the plants have reached a good size,
usually between three and six months, shorten the
light cycle to about 12 hours to force
flowering.
To decide exactly when to force
the plants to flower, let their growth be the
determinant. If male plants are showing their
flowers, then the females are physiologically
ready to flower. Most of the plant's overall
height is achieved during vegetative growth. Some
varieties, of course, are smaller and grow more
slowly than others. Wait until the plants are
nearing the limits of the height of the garden or
are at least five feet tall. This is large enough
to support good flower development and return a
good yield. If you turn down the light cycle when
the plants are young and small, you'll harvest
much less grass because the plants simply can't
sustain a large number of flowers.
Some
leaf growers prefer a continuous growth system,
emphasizing leaf growth and a continuous supply of
grass. The light cycle is set for 18 to 24 hours a
day. This prevents flowering and the plants
continue their rapid vegetative growth. Growing
shoots and leaves are harvested as used, and
plants are removed whenever they lose their vigor
and growth has noticeably slowed. New plants are
started in their place. In this way, there will be
plants at different growth stages, some of which
will be in their rapid vegetative growth stage and
will be quite potent. Male plants and some females
eventually will form flowers, but the females will
not form large clusters. People often use this
system when the lights are permanently fixed.
Small plants are raised up to the lights on tables
or boxes. This garden never shuts down and yields
a continuous supply of
grass.
Variations by Plant
Part
The concentration of cannabinoids
depends on the plant part, or more specifically,
the concentration and development of resin glands
to plant part. The female flower bracts have the
highest concentration of resin glands and are
usually the most potent plant parts. Seeds and
roots have no resin glands. These shoe no more
than traces of cannabinoids. Smoke seeds will give
you a headache before you can get high. If you got
high on seeds, then there were probably enough
bracts adhering to the seeds to get you
high.
Here are the potencies, in descending
order, of the various plant parts:
1.
Female flowering clusters. In practice you don't
separate hundreds
of tiny bracts to make a
joint. The whole flowering mass (seeds
removed),
along with small accompanying leaves,
forms the material.
2. Male flower
clusters. These vary more in relative potency
depending on
the strain (see "Potency by Sex,"
below).
3. Growing shoots. Before the
plants flower, the vegetative shoots (tips)
of
the main stem and branches are the most potent
plant parts.
4. Leaves (a) that accompany
flowers (small);
(b) along branches
(medium);
(c) along main stem
(large).
Generally, the smaller the leaf is,
the more potent it can be.
5. Petioles
(leaf stalks). Same order as leaves.
6.
Stems. Same order as leaves. The smaller the stem
(twig), the
higher the possible concentration
of cannabinoids. Stems over 1/16"
in diameter
contain only traces of cannabinoids and are not
worth
smoking. The small stems that bear the
flowers can be quite potent.
7. Seeds and
Roots. Contain only traces (less then .01 percent)
and
are not worth smoking or
extracting.
This order is fairly
consistent. The exceptions can be the small leaves
that accompany male flowers, which are sometimes
more potent than the flowers themselves. The
growing shoots are sometimes more potent than the
mature female flowers.
Samples of pollen show
varying amounts of cannabinoids. Resin glands are
found inside the anthers, alongside the developing
pollen grains, and form two rows on opposite sides
of each anther. Pollen grains are smaller than the
heads of large resin glands ({see Plate 7}), and
range from 21 to 69 micrometers in diameter21. A
small amount of resin contaminates the pollen when
glands rupture, but most of the THC in pollen
samples comes from gland heads that fall with
pollen when the flowers are shaken to collect it.
One study, using pollen for the sample, found
concentrations of up to 0.96 percent THC, more
then enough to get you
high79.
Cultivation: Indoors or
Outdoors?
The basic elements of the
environment (light, water, air, and soil) provide
plants with their fundamental needs. These
environmental factors affect the growth rates of
plants, as well as their life cycles. If one
factor is deficient, growth rate and vigor will
wan regardless of the other three. For instance,
with low light, the growth will be limited no
matter how fertile and moist the soil is. In the
same sense, if soil minerals are scarce, the
growth rate will be limited no matter how you
increase the light.
Indoors vs.
Outdoors
At this point the book divides
into separate indoor and outdoor cultivation
sections, and you may wonder whether it is better
to grow the plant indoors or outdoors. Each
alternative has advantages and disadvantages. It
is usually better to grow the plants outdoors if
possible, because the plants can grow much larger
and faster than indoor. Indoor presents space and
light limitations. It is possible to grow a
15-foot bush indoors, but this is unrealistic in
most home. There simply isn't enough room or light
for such a large plant. Outdoor gardens return a
much higher yield for the effort and expense. most
indoor gardeners buy soil and may have to buy
electric lights. So there is an initial investment
of anywhere from $10 on up.
On the other
hand, outdoor plants are more likely to be seen.
Many gardens get ripped off, and busts are a
constant threat. Indoor gardens are much less
likely to be discovered. Gardening indoors allows
the grower closer contact with the plants. The
plants can be grown all year long; it is an easy
matter to control their growth cycles and
flowering. Probably the biggest attraction of
indoor gardens is that they are beautiful to watch
and easy to set up anywhere.
One popular
compromise is to construct a simple greenhouse.
Use plastic to either enclose part of a porch or
to cover a frame built against the house.
The
potency of the plants doesn't depend on whether
they are grown indoors or outdoors. As long as you
grow healthy plants that reach maturity and
complete their life cycle, the grass can be as
good as any you've ever smoked