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The Home Cannabis Creator
A Northwestern Guide to Pretty Good Pot
Author: The Cannabis Creator
CONTENTS
- Introduction
- Forget what you know
- Cannabis is a plant
- General info about cannabis
- Commentary on cannabis
- <Risk factors
- Rips, tips and your own big mouth
- Number of plants
- Odor control
- Where to start
- Choosing a space
- Lighting
- AC primer
- H.I.D.'s
- Mylar
- Lighting requirements
- Ventilation
- Soil and containers
- Hydroponics
- Growth cycle
- Photoperiod
- Cloning and sprouting
- Sex and sexing
- Limiting factors
- Water
- Light
- Nutrients
- Oxygen
- Carbon dioxide
- Potency, maturity, harvesting and drying
- When to harvest
- Harvesting, manicuring and drying
1. Introduction
Welcome to
The Home Cannabis creator. Congratulations on your
excellent taste in subject matter.
This is
a straightforward compilation of the collective
experience of a successful co-op of Seattle-area
growers known as the Snohomish County
CannabisCreators (S.C.C.C.). Founded with the
planting of a seed in 1991, the S.C.C.C.'s mission
is to make information and high quality clones
available to anyone interested, so that they can
have the know how and the genetics to produce
world-class sensimillia. Membership is then gained
by selling this product well dried for a
reasonable price, so that it will always remain
widely available for the sick, the stressed and
the silent lovers of the cherished
cannabis.
This guide is intended
specifically for people who wish to create
cannabisindoors, using lights, for personal use or
on a small commercial to large commercial scale.
It is geared for the novice or unsuccessful,
because if you are experienced and successful you
have established what works for you, and that is
the system that I recommend most highly. I have
known too many happy growers that made the mistake
of buying one of those 300-plus page grow
textbooks after growing successfully for a period
of time. Usually they are horrified when they
discover that the "official" book tells them that
they are doing something, or everything,
completely wrong.
The methods described
here are certainly not the only way to create
large amounts of high quality cannabis; in fact,
it seems to me that there are as many ways as
there are growers. What it all boils down to in
this school is how to have the greatest success,
productivity and satisfaction, while spending the
least amount of time, energy, and money in the
process. It boils down to efficiency.
Also
included is my personal favorite part, the
dispelling of a persistent list of local tall
tales that cause many current cannabis creators
unnecessary stress or confusion and cause some
people not to grow at all.
If you do grow,
but are not producing the quality or quantity of
cannabis that you desire, or if you have been
unsuccessful in the past, I suggest that you read
on with an open mind, as if you hadn't ever
attempted to grow before. Without change, things
will only remain the same- so the first rule still
applies to you- forget what you know. Start fresh.
Don't try to improvise with your old supplies,
methods, equipment, or anything else if it's a
compromise from what is described. Be aware that
large gardens are a full time job. A large garden
won't necessarily produce more buds than a small
garden unless you spend proportionately more time
tending it.
Vast amounts of information
have been left out for simplicity's sake.
Cannabisis certainly one of the most complex
subjects that one could hope to ponder, and you
will find your career as a cannabis creator to be
a continuous learning experience, for however long
you pursue it.
A. Forget what you know The very first and most
damning mistake a novice cannabis creator can make
is stubbornly sticking to anything that you think
that you already know about creating cannabis.
Many people who decide to grow do so after years
of being what I call "cannabis enthusiasts". That
is to say, that you have already had much
experience with cannabis, seeing, smelling,
distributing and of course tasting, and thus of
course, it probably has been the subject of many
animated conversations in your life. But talk is
cheap. Ask yourself this- "Have any of my friends
confided in me that they were producing large
amounts of high quality cannabis, and did they
actually let me assist in the process from start
to finish?" If the answer is yes, then you don't
need this book. If your friend grows and trusts
you that much, have them set you up. If the answer
is no, I implore you to forget everything that you
have ever heard about it, because 99.9% of all
stories circulating about successful
cannabiscreators are completely false. The reason
for this is simple: successful cannabis creators
don't talk about their operations. I cannot count
the number of ridiculous stories that I have heard
from people (usually at a party or bar, after a
few drinks) concerning this mysterious
grower-friend and their even more mysterious
methods.
Common tall tales include the guy
that has 500 (or more!) 8 foot tall Christmas
trees in his basement (hopefully nobody with 500
plants would tell this blabbermouth, and by my
calculations, this basement would have to be about
50 x 100 feet). Or the guy who hung his plants or
buds upside down so that "the resins would 'drain'
into the buds" (resins don't 'drain', period). Or
their friend who sprayed the buds with (pick one)
water, fruit juice of any kind, sugar water, or
anything else to give them crystals or make them
look, taste or smell better.
The next time
that someone tells you "this is 39th generation
bud!" ask them what a generation is.
I
still hear about Mylar on the floor and/or
ceiling, or multiple layers of Mylar to avoid
infra-red detection (this story was spread by a
narc who happened to have a business selling
Mylar).
My personal favorite is the
amazingly common story that someone is actually
growing their plants upside-down- buckets in the
air, lights on the ground. ("Uh...
whatever.")
For our purposes; for the
normal Joe or Jill who just dreams of smoking the
kind freely, (as in for free), or maybe slightly
bigger dreams of quarters and pounds available,
these kinds of stories represent total ignorance,
whether or not they are based on truth.
Furthermore, anyone who alleges to be growing "the
UW" is probably misinformed at least. The
University of Washington did have a medical
research program, but only for two years, 1978 and
1979. Then came the war on drugs, and research was
banned by any independent non-government
laboratories. (Hmmm). I am highly suspicious of
"U.W." stories because I have seen every different
kind of bud referred to as "the U.W.", no two ever
alike.
As far as the person who got busted
when the power company or the police helicopter
"detected" their grow lights, most of these tales
are ones that the fascists would be happy to have
you believe. As for power consumption, many
residences use lots of electricity for many
different reasons including cannabis creation.
There is no way that anyone can detect anything
through the power lines. As far as the Infra-red
thermal imaging (heat sensing) technology that a
minority of law enforcement have available, this
device can only measure the temperature of an
outside surface like the roof or a wall. High
powered lights get quite hot so they tend to make
warm spots, but if your lights are in any well
insulated space like a basement, they may not even
show up at all. Also if there is attic space above
the grow room, the outside roof temperature would
not be affected because the air in the attic acts
as an insulator. One notable exception to this
rule would be any warm exhaust air flowing out of
the room directly to the outside. On a
heat-sensing device this would appear as a large
fountain. This can be avoided by exhausting into
another room (attic, garage, etc.) or up a
chimney, instead of directly to the
outside.
But listen carefully, students,
this is the twist that they want you to miss- In
either case, it is a moot point because if they
are using these techniques on you, then you are
already under investigation. If you are already
under investigation, it probably wasn't anyone who
you don't know that "detected" you, get
it?
I think that this concept is the
underlying point and theme of this whole book. It
cannot be stressed or understood enough that your
main problem as a smart grower will definitely not
be law enforcement figuring it out by
themselves.
Jails are chock full of people
who would give up their own mothers to get out.
Police forfeitures generate lots of money that
they can use to encourage criminals on the outside
to be narcs. Tip lines ring off the hooks, deluged
with calls from people brainwashed with drug-war
hysteria, who think they heard a rumor or smelled
something just slightly out of the ordinary. Cops
bust naive kids with a pipe or a bowl, and then
threaten them with anything that will get them to
squeal. These are just a few of the ways that
modern law enforcement tries to deal with the
responsibility of having to find and imprison
otherwise normal Americans for something as common
and benign as eating donuts. The fastest ways. The
least expensive ways. The easy
ways.
Another good tip is that anyone who
claims to have the best cannabis definitely
doesn't. So don't believe what you've
heard.
B. Cannabis is a plant The concept of cannabis creation
can be understood most easily by keeping one
simple fact in mind- cannabis is a plant. A very
highly evolved plant for that matter. Plants were
not designed to grow indoors. So in order to have
a happy thriving garden indoors, you must fool the
plants into believing that they are in fact
outdoors. It is your job to re-create or simulate
to the last detail, The sun, the wind, the
rainfall, climate and soil conditions of the
perfect outdoor plot in say, northern California,
Thailand, or Hawaii. In this environment cannabis
is the fastest growing plant on the planet. It
processes the suns light (photosynthesizes) more
efficiently than any other fast growing plants
such as bamboo, corn or kenaf.
C. General information about
cannabis Cannabis is a dioecious woody
herbaceous annual. Dioecious means that each plant
will have distinct male or female characteristics,
woody refers to the consistency of the stem,
herbacious means, yes, cannabis is an cannabis,
and annual means that outdoors, if left wild, it
will complete its entire growth cycle, from seed
to maturity (seed) in a single season and then
die. This is perfectly normal.
The main
active ingredient in cannabis is THC, or delta-9
tetrahydrocannibinol. The THC is concentrated in
the resins of the mature female flowers and to a
much lesser degree in the leaves and male flowers.
These parts of the plant are simply dried and then
smoked or eaten to obtain the desired
effect.
In over 5000 years of documented
medical history, from aincient Chinese and
Babylonian cultures right up to today in the
United States, there has never been a reported
overdose or death from ingesting this substance.
It has been estimated that one would have to
consume at least seven pounds of medium quality
cannabis in a short period of time just to produce
a "toxic effect" in the human body. Every modern
governmental study in the world convened to
examine the issue, including studies by the U.S.
Army, the Jamacian coptic study, Nixon's 1968
LaGuardia Commission and more recently the
Republican governor of California, George
Dukemajens' Shaffer Commission, have all
recommended decriminalization. In 1988, the drug
enforcement agency's (D.E.A.'s) own administrative
law judge, Francis L. Young wrote, in an over 60
page long ruling that "it has been clearly shown
[in this court] that cannabis is far less toxic
than many foods that we commonly consume" (like
potatoes) and that "it is unreasonable, arbitrary
and capricious" that this substance is placed in
"schedule one", the United States federal
governments' category of drugs that includes PCP
and heroin, not even available for prescription by
doctors.
There are three important varities
of cannabis that you should know about. Cannabis
indica is generally a short (two to six feet)
bushy plant well suited to indoor growing with
chunky ripened flowers that can range in potency
from okay to mind-blowing.
Cannabis sativa
is generally a wild unruly vine indoors, and
outdoors has been known to reach heights of 16
feet or more, yeilding pounds of slender,
flavorful buds that can range in potency from okay
to messing with the space-time
continuum.
The majority of good seed stock
and clones available to todays indoor grower are
pure indicas and lots of indica\sativa hybrids
(crosses, or blends) usually leaning towards the
indica side.
Cannabis hemp is by far the
most important variety of cannabis. Its flowers
would not interest you, in fact they have earned
this plant the nickname "ditch weed". The
impressive part of the hemp plant is its stems,
which can provide a stunning array of important
and biodegradable products, such as a natural
fiber for papermaking, textiles and to replace
timber products and therefore clear cutting, and
cellulose, an industrial feedstock used to make
plastics, chemicals, fibers, non toxic fuels for
heating and generating electricity, and clean
burning ethanol to run cars. Its edible seeds are
also impressive, a highly nutritious food
containing critical unsaturated fatty acids as
well as more edible protien than soybeans, and can
be used for producing high grade biodegradable
oils that can form the base for paints or lacquers
or be used for lubrication. For endless
information on this subject and enlightenment on
the meaning of life on earth, I highly recommend
reading "The Emperor Wears No Clothes" by Jack
Herer.
For today we will concern ourselves
with only the first two varities of cannabis; hemp
is deserving of its own book.
Although
there are technically only these two
classifications of high THC varieties, indica and
sativa, cannabis must be thought of on a much
broader scale. An easy way to think of the
countless different pure and hybridized strains of
cannabis is to compare them to dogs.
When
talking about dogs, hybrids are called mutts, but
everyone knows that mutts can have more character
and charm. Like dogs, pure lines can only come
from pure parents. Also, a dog may be a german
shepard or a chiuaua, but just because a dog fits
into a category like that dosen't mean that every
shepard or chiuaua is the same as the next. In
fact, it's just the opposite.
All living
things have DNA which help determine all of their
physical characteristics. DNA is what insures that
no two people, dogs or cannabisseedlings will ever
be alike. Even identical twins are different. For
our purposes, DNA is the code that contains every
bit of information as to how a plant will grow,
how it will look, it's potency and every possible
trait that it could ever have. To further the dog
analogy, the DNA and thus all physical features
come 1\2 from the female parent and 1/2 from the
male parent, resulting in offspring (seeds or
seedlings) that should somewhat resemble their
parents.
Unlike dogs, cannabis can be
"cloned". It is very important to understand the
simple basic difference between a seedling and a
clone. A seedling is a plant that was sprouted
from a seed that was the product of sexual
reproduction between a male and a female.
Approximately one-half of these seeds or seedlings
will be female, and approximately one half male.
Each and every one, regardless of its sex, will be
different.
A clone was never a seed. A
clone starts out as a growing tip of a larger
established plant (a seedling or a clone) which
was cut off, treated with a rooting hormone, put
into its own small container, sprouted roots, and
is now a separate plant, although potentially
identical in every way to the plant that it was
taken from. As its name implies, it is an exact
genetic duplicate. As far as the plant is
concerned, it is the same plant. It never died,
the DNA stayed intact, so that clone will always
be the same sex, and have the same growth traits
as well as the same potential potency, flavor and
high.
This is very handy for the cannabis
creator, because all you have to do is obtain one
good clone and every bit of cannabis you create
can be exactly the same, technically never
increasing or decreasing in potency. Any potency
variations in a mono-clonal (one clone)
sinsemillia (seedless-no boys=no pollen=no seeds)
garden are related to environmental factors and
conditions, maturity, drying techniques, and the
presence of a perceptive, consistent, hard-working
grower. (Or the lack thereof).
2. Risk factors
A. Rip-offs, tip-offs and your own big
mouth Reading a chapter entitled "risk
factors" of cannabis cultivation in the United
States, one might automatically assume that the
subject of that chapter would be law enforcement.
After all, hundreds of millions of dollars are
spent every year by various anti-plant life
agencies around the country on the ferocious war
to exterminate this harmless and helpful species.
However, despite the normal paranoia that is a
byproduct of the current system, law enforcement
actually only represents about 2% of the problems
that face modern American freedom fighters. Law
enforcement techniques like reducing mandatory
sentences for squealers and placing anti-cannabis
ads with 1-800-GROW police hot lines are vivid
proof of exactly how clueless these people are
when it comes to where to start looking for the
cunning grower.
Any estimate given by the
authorities relating to the percentage of
cannabisseized in a particular time period or area
is fabricated. The truth is that they have no idea
how much of the crop was uncovered, because the
remainder went undetected.
By far, the
number one risk facing the modern cannabis creator
is thieves. This point cannot be emphasized
enough. Rip-offs don't answer to anybody. They
don't care about your civil rights. They dont
follow any rules at all.
In my opinion,
people who steal are really at the bottom of the
food chain, period. But people who steal cannabis,
especially from the growers, endangering their
freedom, have got to be the saddest, lowest, most
pathetic and most thoughtless (deviod of thought)
individuals on this earth. And they are
abundant.
The number one way to get busted
is when the ripoffs come to steal your crop and
somehow the cops get called. This may be simply
the concerned neighbor who calls when they see
prowlers, or a concerned passer-by who only
witnessed you violently pummeling a would-be
intruder with a bat, or someone who heard gunshots
when you shot the scumbag, (not recomended) or the
shots of the scumbag shooting you (less
recommended). (It is a serious legal complication
to have a gun at the cannabis growing
location).
The second most common way to
get busted is through your girl/boyfriend or your
roommate/grow partner, (love and money are both by
nature de-stabilizing) or anyone else who has
knowlege. No matter how much you trust someone,
they might end up telling just one other person,
who "they trust". This person has nothing to lose
and will undoubtedly tell just one other person
who "they trust" and who you might not even know.
The cannabis creators' creedo should be "for every
one person you tell, that's too many." It can be
good to have a partner if you have a large garden,
because cannabiscreation can be a lot of work, but
this person should have just as much to lose as
you do. This is the best incentive for both of you
to keep your mouths shut.
Realistically, a
small commercial operation (5KW or less), in a
good location, with a good odor control system
that only two trusting people know about is
virtually unbustable. You peek out of your blinds
for months, always expecting to see the cops, but
the bust only comes when a Cessna has engine
failure and crashes through your roof. In my
experience, I have never seen any cannabiscreator
get busted because the police figured it out by
themselves. It is true that the slightest hint may
get them on your trail, but it is inversely true
that without that, you should be getting away with
your wildest dreams.
B. Number of plants Under the law, a
cannabis creator is judged by one factor and one
factor only; the number of plants in a single
residence. A plant is defined as having roots, so
unrooted clones do not count. The cannabis creator
must also learn to distinguish between state and
federal law. Washington state has some of the most
leiniant cultivation laws in the country, but this
country has some of the harshest, most evil and
draconian penalties on planet earth. According to
state law, the catagories are 1-99, 100-299 and
300 or more. Federal law adds a 50-99 category. It
is hard to say exactly what determines whether a
given case will go to state or federal court. Most
cases below 100 plants go to the state because
theoretically, the feds only want the big fish,
but this simplistic analogy cannot explain the
arbitrary methods of our warped and corrupt
federal government. In fact the whole theory of
saying that a large number of plants equals a
large amount of cannabis is fundamentally flawed.
300-plus plants could potentially fit under a 400
watt lamp and yeild 6 or 8 ounces of dried
product, or 300 plants could fill a vast outdoor
plot or greenhouse and yield one or more pounds
per plant, a considerable difference. So, we find
that living in this state of unreasonable and
illogical laws, people learn to turn the laws
around and use them against their oppressor. Case
in point:
A first time offender (no prior
felony convictions) will almost never receive jail
time in Washington state court on a case of 1-99
plants, and certainly no more than 30 days. The
maximum penalty is 90 days. This is very good to
know considering that in an averege sized
basement, converted to a 3 to 5KW grow facility,
99 plants or less can easily yield two to four or
more pounds of dried, manicured cannabis each
month. When you have achieved that, and you still
aren't meeting your economic goals, you can easily
afford to rent another house or apartment and
install 99 more units to stay within the
one-hundred or less prosecution category.
Cake.
C. Odor control There are many common ways to
reduce the fragrance of pungent cannabis flowers,
including ionizers (negative ion generators),
charcoal filters, air scrubbers, and chemical
sprays. Unfortunately, reduce is the key word
here. None of these methods will do much to
eliminate any smells except from the smallest room
or the least stinky garden. There are some strains
of cannabis that are known for their lack of the
trademark cannabis smell, and are perpetuated for
that reason. I realize that you're more likely to
find a charcoal filter than any particular clone,
but I am trying to emphasize that basically, you
should be prepared to deal with the beautiful
smell of fragrant cannabis flowers.
Here is
a brief overview of how these devices work.
Ionizers work by generating negatively charged
ions and dispersing them into the air. When these
negative ions come in contact with positively
charged particles floating in the air like dust or
pollen, they change the particles' charge to
negative, causing the particle to "precipitate",
or to fall to the ground. This results in cleaner
air, and dirtier floors and walls.
Another
kind of ionizer is called a "collector ionizer".
These incorporate some disposable filter and
either a positively charged surface which attracts
the ionized particles, or a small fan that moves
the air through the filter (which usually also
contains activated charcoal) and then injects the
ions into the outgoing airstream. Charcoal filters
are similar to these but use only the fan and
activated charcoal, and are usually slightly more
heavy duty, and seem to work about as well, as
long as you keep the charcoal fresh by changing
the filter regularly.
Air scrubbers consist
of a large barrel of water with your exhaust piped
into it, like a giant bong, and then to the
outside. Pine cleaner and/or liquid smoke are
added to the water to taint the smell. I have
never personally built one of these but the theory
makes sense, except that it seems awkward and I
don't think it would work with high-powered
exhaust blowers.
Chemical sprays are used
in hospitals and kennels to deal with very harsh
odors. They work, but I personally find the
artificial, chemical odor overwhelming to the
point of nausea. I do not recommend these sprays
because they are impractical to use on a
continuous basis, and frankly if its gonna stink,
I'd rather have it stink like greenbud.
If
you can't find or afford any of the above, a
simple trick is to buy a box of urinal deodorizers
from a janitorial supply store, or maybe car
deodorizers, and put one or two next to your
exhaust blowers' intake.
Now aside from the
above described odor reduction devices there are
two more things that I will recommend for this
task. The first one is called an ozone generator.
This mighty device generates ozone, an unstable
oxygen molecule that actually changes the
molecular structure of stinky particles that they
come into contact with. This results in total odor
elimination. The proper way to use an ozone
generator is piped into your outgoing exhaust.
(The generator has its own small blower built in.)
Of course, like everything, there are trade-offs
for this amazing performance. Ozone can be harmful
to plants, animals or people in too high of a
concentration. The only way to use it safely is by
using it to treat the exhaust that is going
outside. Also, ozone generators are quite
expensive. The three models that I am familiar
with run around $750., $1350., and on up to
$2600., with this most expensive model being quite
adequate to de-stinkify the 5000 C.F.M. exhaust of
a large warehouse (25KW) full of stinkiness.
(Yummy!) It seems to most people like a lot to
spend, but in some situations, it can be your
saving grace. I recommend ozone for all commercial
growers. If you are interested in this device, try
calling indoor grow supply stores with ads in the
little nickel or yellow pages.
The second,
most practical and most effective method of odor
control is your exhaust system itself. You will
learn later in this book that a good exhaust
system is just as important to happy plants as
light or water, and although this won't actually
make the outgoing air less stinky, it allows you
to control where the stinky air goes. For example,
lets say you live in a third floor corner 2
bedroom apartment. One bedroom is your bedroom,
the other is your grow room. A properly installed
exhaust system can solve two odor problems at the
same time. One, inside the living space of your
apartment. By leaving your exhaust blower running
24 hours a day, there will always be "negative
pressure" inside the grow room. This simply means
that air will constantly be flowing into the grow
room through every possible crack and opening, and
when fresh air is constantly flowing in, no smell
gets out. Two, outside your apartment. By cleverly
routing the exhaust pipe into your unused chimney
pipe, or out of the far back corner of your attic,
the smelly air will end up where there are no
noses to smell it- either 4 stories off the
sidewalk or parking lot (and heading up) in the
chimney pipe example, or on the backside of your
building where there are no stairs and where
nobody hangs out. (If a bud reeks in the city, but
there are no noses to smell it, did it ever really
smell at all?) Another thing to consider in
apartment cultivation is that even if you can
smell the weed out in the parking lot, there is no
way to tell which apartment it is coming from. It
sounds crazy, but 'round these parts it happens
all the time. Smells pretty good,
too.
D. Power consumption I was reluctant to even
include a section about power consumption because
I thought that it would just breed paranoia.
Residences all around use large amounts of power
for all kinds of things, including cannabis
cultivation, and there is no way for grow lights
to be "detected" by the power company. However, I
do have a list of power saving tips for the power
conscious.
The number one power sucker in
your home is the hot water heater. Most of these
units use between 3500 and 7000 watts. Turning off
this unit at the circuit box will dramatically
reduce your power bill (not to mention the length
of your showers, ha ha). Number two would be your
baseboard heaters. These are the most wasteful
power suckers. A 4-foot long baseboard unit can
draw 1000 watts or more. A small apartment usually
has several of these. Turn them off at the box.
Plug-in electric space heaters usually consume
1000 to 1500 watts. Cold? Hang out with the ganja.
(I have seen electric internal forced air heating
systems in large homes that consume as much power
as ten or more 1KW grow lamps. These are ideal
grow houses because by turning off the heat, your
bill may not be any higher than the previous
residents). Tied for number three are your
dishwasher and clothes washer. Both of these units
use lots of hot water, and the dishwasher even
super-heats the already hot water. The clothes
dryer is also a major culprit. Use paper plates
and go to the Laundromat. At number four we have
the refrigerator and freezer. Most people won't
want to try and live without these, but try
putting gallon jugs of water in the empty spaces
(if any) of both. Water retains its temperature
more efficiently than air, so your fridge will use
less energy. Also, a lot of people seem to have
this thing about leaving all the lights in the
house on all the time. Remember to turn off lights
you're not using. Use low wattage bulbs. If no one
is living at the grow facility, all of these
appliances should be turned off at the box and you
should be growing a lot of weed.
3. Where to start
A. Choosing a space Any space
is a good space to create cannabis. Ceilings
should be a minimum of about 6 feet. Attics, crawl
spaces, alcoves, closets, sheds, barns and extra
bedrooms are good. Basements are the best unless
you own property and happen to have a backhoe and
an extra school bus or storage container to bury.
Anything underground is very good. If you need to
maximize your square footage in a small bedroom,
take the closet doors off and use that space just
like a part of the room. The space will need a
good power supply (for 2KWs or more, the range or
clothes dryer plug will provide 240v power) and
access to water (trash barrels filled with a
garden hose are common in spaces that don't have a
nearby bathtub or work sink) and somewhere to vent
your exhaust.
B. Lighting
I. AC primer If you don't know anything about
household electricity, and don't want to learn by
say, checking a book out from the library on basic
household wiring, then I recommend trying to stay
under about 2KW (two thousand watts) of power use
to minimize the risk of fire on, or the
electrocution of, your person. Always keep
extention cords off the ground and keep cord runs
as short as possible. Wrap cord connections in
duct tape. If you can't plug your 1KW lamps
directly into the wall socket, use extra heavy
duty cords, and never ones over 25 feet long.
Never use spliters or power strips on outlets or
cords running 1KW lamps. Never run more than one
1KW lamp on a single household circuit (15 amp
breaker). Only run circuits at 70 percent of their
rated amperage for a safety margin. The formula to
calculate amperage is watts divided by volts
equals amps. (Example: 1000 watt lamp at 120 volts
= 8.33 amps). (120 volts is standard American
household wall socket voltage).
If you plan
on using more than 2KW, then you should use a
"power drop" or "power board". This is essentially
a breaker box that wires directly into a
heavy-duty (240 volt) power source in your
residence and is installed nearby or in the grow
room so that you can safley power multiple 1KW
lighting systems. Boxes designed specifically for
this purpose are available at indoor grow supply
stores and incorporate a heavy duty timer that
will put up to 8 1KW, 240 volt systems on a timed
cycle of your choice. They can also provide stout
supplies of 120 volt power if nessecary for high
amprege, low voltage accesories such as exaust
blowers, fans or heaters. These outlets can be on
the timer also, or can be wired for continuous
power. Good indoor grow supply stores will custom
make the board that you want. These boards should
have "pigtails" (short fat cords with molded 240
volt plugs adaptable to your dryer or range
outlet). Alternatively, the board can be purchased
without the pigtail and "hard wired" to a
compatible plug or directly to the circuit box
with heavy gauge Romex cable (10 gauge solid
copper wire) by someone who surely knows what they
are doing. It's not too complicated, but it can be
very dangerous. Be smart.
II. H.I.D.'s H.I.D. stands for
High Intensity Discharge. H.I.D. lamps that are
commonly used for cannabis creation include metal
halides (M.H.), high pressure sodiums (H.P.S.),
sodium conversions, balanced spectrum sodiums, and
florescents.
Metal halides are the most
common variety of H.I.D. lamp for indoor
horticulture. They also have the shortest service
life. Their light output will drop to 50% of new
in only about 6-9 months of regular use, and your
yeilds will drop accordingly, so only new metal
halide lamps are suitable.
H.P.S. lamps are
substantually brighter than M.H.'s and last
longer, but emit most of their light in a narrow
red-orange color band, as opposed to the M.H.'s
full spectrum (all colors), sun-like
light.
Sodium conversions are a retro-fit
replacement lamp that run in a M.H. system but use
slightly less power and emit light in a more
balanced color spectrum than regular H.P.S. lamps.
They also retain thier intensity about ten times
longer than M.H. lamps, but are quite
expensive.
Balanced spectrum sodiums were
developed by the Dutch specifically for their
world-renowned greenhouses. They started with a
H.P.S. to achieve maximum efficiency and service
life, and then tweaked the ingredients in the lamp
to increase the amount of blue light in the light
spectrum. The 430 watt son-agro lamp by Phillips
was the first balanced spectrum sodium to hit the
market in the U.S., and remains the most efficient
(most light per watt) 400 watt class lamp
available. Recently, I have seen Dutch 600 watt
balanced spectrum sodium systems available to
American growers. Although they are incompatible
and unfamiliar, These systems warrant a very close
look. They claim to produce 90,000 to 100,000
lumens, or about 80% of the output of a new 1000
watt M.H., using only 60% of the electricity. In a
large garden, this efficiency increase could
increase yields significantly.
Florescents
are bulky and relativley inefficient, but do
provide a good color spectrum, generate very
little heat and have soft, even light
distribution. These characteristics make them very
suitable for rooting clones or for growing very
small plants (under 12 inches). They are also
amazingly inexpensive. A four-foot, two-tube
shop-lite fixture is only about ten dollars at
your local hardware store. Many different kinds of
tubes are available to put into these fixtures,
some fancy models costing up to 15 dollars or more
per tube claiming better growth, but they aren't
any brighter, and that is what the cannabis plant
cares most about. "Cool white" tubes are the smart
choice if using florescents. They are the most
common, very inexpensive, usually less than a
dollar each, and have a similar color spectrum to
the M.H., good for vegetative growth. The "watts
per square foot" theory applies to flourescents
also. (See "Lighting requirements", below)
Florescents use about ten watts per foot per tube,
so a four-foot two-tube unit would consume about
80 watts, and would be suitable to light four
square feet at 20 w.p.f.2. (Minimum vegetative
requirement). These lights do not even compare to
the light output of M.H. or H.P.S. lamps. You
should not try to grow tall plants with
florescents, because the lower branches will
basically be in the dark, due to the lack of light
intensity over about one foot away from the tubes
themselves. M.H.'s, sodium conversions, and
balanced spectrum H.P.S.'s are the choice of
serious cannabis creators for their flowering
rooms.
All of these H.I.D.'s work on the
same principal. They all have "ballasts" that plug
into the wall, and transform the low voltage
household current (120v or 240v if you are using a
power board) into high voltage (480v) to run the
lamp. When you turn it on, a capacitor in the
ballast builds up a huge bolt of energy, which is
sent to electrodes at either end of a gas filled
tube inside of the lamp itself (the arc tube).
This burst of energy causes an arc of electricity
to jump through the gas and the arc is then
maintained by the high voltage, generating very
intense light as a reaction, thus their name, High
Intensity Discharge.
M.H. and H.P.S. lamps
come in various wattages, but I mostly only
recomend 1KW (1 Kilowatt, or 1000 watt) lamps for
flowering rooms, or the occasional 400 watt for a
very small space. Smaller ones such as
Flourescents or 150, 250 and 400 watt H.I.D.
systems can be utilized in vegetative areas with
young plants, but if you plan on growing them
above about 14 inches tall in the vegetative room
I still recommend using 1KWs for best
results.
These systems consist of: Power
cord. Plugs into wall or power board, supplies
ballast with low voltage 120 or 240VAC (Volts AC).
Ballast. Essentially a transformer. Converts the
low voltage to high voltage. Lamp cord. This is a
long non-detachable cord that carries the high
voltage from the ballast to the socket assembly.
The socket assembly is where the lamp screws in
and also where the hood attaches. The hood is a
large reflective piece that focuses the light
downward. The lamp is a vacuum sealed glass sphere
that contains the gas filled tube which emits the
light. All of this usually comes in a package deal
for around $250.
There are two main types
of hoods, vertical and horizontal. Both refer to
the orientation of the lamp. A vertical hood holds
the lamp vertically, with the socket side up and
the tip of the lamp pointing downward. A
horizontal hood holds the lamp horizontally, with
the socket on one side and the lamp sticking out
sideways. Vertical systems seem to be more
practical because they are less expensive, less
complicated to assemble and, as long as all the
walls are lined with Mylar, they distribute more
direct light more evenly.
III. Mylar After you have gone
to considerable trouble and expense to achieve
proper lighting in your space, it only makes sense
to be aware that to get the maximum light levels
(i.e. fat buds) out of your system, the plants
need to be surrounded (four sides) with a highly
reflective surface. Other things have
traditionally been used such as tin foil or space
blankets, but these are totally ineffective, even
compared to flat white paint, which is a better
alternative.
Mylar is a highly reflective
plastic sheeting used to bounce light back on to
the plants. Using mylar is the most effective and
economical way to increase the critical light
levels in any indoor garden. It is by far, the
most reflective material available to line your
grow area, so that your precious light is directed
onto and absorbed by your plants, and not the
surfaces of the area surrounding them. It comes in
rolls that are generally about 4 feet wide, in
thicknesses of 1 or 2 mil. (Thousandths of an
inch). 2 mil. is about 40% more expensive, and
both thicknesses reflect equally, but the 1 mil.
tends to be hard to work with and wrinkles easily,
whereas the 2 mil. goes up more like a mirror and
is easier to re-use. It should be hung on all
walls that face the plants, and lightweight,
moveable barriers can be made for the sides that
open to the room using foam insulating board,
cardboard, or frames built from 1x2's, and covered
using duct tape and staples. To prevent staples
from tearing the mylar it is a good idea to put a
piece of duct tape over the spot where you are
going to staple it, then staple through the tape
several times. Adhesive caulk can be used to hang
it on concrete or brick surfaces.
IV. Lighting requirements As
far as lighting requirements for a given space,
try to think on a watts-per-square-foot basis. If
you learn to do this from the beginning, you will
find that it is an easy and consistent way to
relate the relative brightness of any grow area.
(Also, yield-per-square-foot is a good way to
track production). You will also find a direct
link between this brightness and the growth
habits, bud density and overall yield of your
plants. To calculate the square footage of your
area, multiply (L)ength times (W)idth. Then divide
the square feet into the total watts of all the
lamps. This figure is your watts per square foot
(w.p.f.2). A minimum of about 20-30 w.p.f.2 will
be adequate for the vegetative area and 30 to 40
w.p.f.2 or more is recommended for highest yields
and vigorous growth during flowering.
C. Ventilation Outdoors, plants
are exposed to constant fresh air, so they are
supplied with an unlimited amount of carbon
dioxide. Indoors, the air is mostly stagnate, so
the cannabis creator uses high powered exaust fans
to simulate the outdoor fresh air enviroment. The
growers ventilation system actually serves many
purposes. By constantly removing hot, humid air
out of the grow space, the exaust serves to reduce
high humidity levels caused by water evaporation
[from wet soil or reserviors] in the room, and to
control the substantial heat created by 1KW H.I.D.
systems. As the stale air is removed, fresh air
flows into the room to take the place of the old
air, which will be depleted of carbon dioxide by
fast growing cannabis plants. This fresh air
contains lots of fresh carbon dioxide for the
plants to breathe. Also, as discussed earlier,
your exaust system is your most obvious and
effective means of odor control. These are reasons
why for the serious indoor horticulturist,
ventilation is not an option! It is mandatory.
Ventilation is just as important as adequate light
or water.
This means that you not only need
to exhaust a lot of air out of the room, but
vigorously circulate the air inside the room as
well. 16-inch oscillating fans and 20-inch box
fans are good to place inside the room for blowing
fresh air around the plants. Except in the case of
very young plants that are not yet established or
not growing quickly, generally more is better,
especially in flowering. Plants that have been
exposed to vigorous air circulation grow much
sturdier and more vigorously than plants that have
not.
Exhaust blowers, (also called squirrel
cage fans) are rated by C.F.M. (cubic feet per
minute). Good ventilation means having a blower
that will keep your average temperatures around 78
degrees and your realitive humidity at about 50%.
If you have no idea what to get, start with about
150 to 250 C.F.M. per 1KW H.I.D. lamp and ballast.
Common sizes include 100, 265, 465,745 and 980
C.F.M.. The fart fan in your bathroom is usually
rated at about 55 C.F.M..
Four inch dryer
duct is only adequate for up to 100 C.F.M.. Above
that you should use 7, 8 or 10-inch aluminum
flex-duct for up to 1000 C.F.M.. Keep the run as
short as possible and avoid sharp turns for
maximum airflow.
Connecting exhaust blowers
to the ducting used to be a labor intensive task
involving razor blades, several cardboard boxes
and an entire roll of duct tape. Today, your local
hardware store carries an amazing new product
called spray insulating foam. Try some. Apply
liberally.
D. Soil and Buckets Although any prepackaged
potting soil will do, For production purposes, I
recommend Pro-Mix. It comes in bales, is fairly
easy to find and consists primarily of Canadian
peat moss and perlite. This provides proper ph
levels, does not pack down easily and won't remain
soggy, allowing the roots to "breathe" (healthy
roots need a good balance of oxygen and water) and
therefore also allowing you good control over the
watering/fertilizer regimen. It is also very
inexpensive as compared to other
options.
Although the hand watering and
appearance of the media may make you think that
this is a soil-based system, it is actually a
quasi-hydroponic setup in which the medium
provides the optimum water-to-oxygen ratio, and
not the nutrients to the roots (plant). All
nutrients are provided by regular fertilization
with a high-quality, full-spectrum, hydroponic
formula which is dissolved in the water at
watering time.
Normal potting soils and
other heavier soils can be amended with about 2 or
3 parts peat moss and perlite and/or vermiculite
to one part soil to decrease water retention.
Heavy, soggy soils create unhappy root conditions.
A simple test for any soil is this: take a handful
of wet soil and squeeze it into a ball in your
fist. When you open your hand it should fall apart
or fall apart with a slight poke. If it becomes a
solid ball after you squeeze it, it is probably
not suited for your purposes. When filling the
buckets, do not pack the soil down. Break up any
chunks. The consistency of dry soil should be
light and fluffy. As far as buckets go, a simple
rule of thumb is about 2 gallons of capacity per
foot of the height of the finished plant. Too
small of a container can definitely restrict
growth and cause watering problems. Most growers I
know transplant rooted clones into 2 gallon
containers for vegetative growth, and then
transplant them into 7 gallon containers for
flowering. Gro-bags are convenient for getting
stealthily in or out, as they make a much smaller
package than a stack of buckets. Their squat,
squarish shape is also well suited for indoor
growing.
E. Hydroponics Hydroponics is Latin for
"working water." The concept is very simple.
Instead of growing plants in soil that is
naturally rich in organic nutrients (like compost
or various poop), the plants grow in a media that
provides the roots (plant) only with physical
support, and a supply of oxygen to the roots that
is unachievable in normal soil based systems.
Rockwool, the most popular hydroponic medium, with
its near-perfect oxygen to water retention
capabilities has been the home of some of the
healthiest, fastest growing, most vigorous plants
I have ever seen. The nutrients are provided
solely when the media is periodically flushed or
soaked in water that has the necessary nutrients
dissolved in it. This is usually accomplished with
a simple set up of pumps and sequence timers,
which deliver the solution out of a reservoir to
each plant using drip-emitters that water each
container individually, or ebb and flow techniques
that fill and then drain trays or tables. This is
called "active hydroponics" where the water is
actively moved around. The Pro-mix based system
described in this book is essentially a "passive"
(no pumps, no timers) hydroponic system, because
the media doesn't provide the nutrients, they are
provided dissolved in the water at watering
time.
Unfortunately, As with many simple
concepts, hydroponics doesn't necessarily
translate easily to reality. Most hydroponic media
leave little room for error, and one mistake can
spell disaster. I recommend full blown hydro
set-ups only to the experienced grower who has a
keen sense of all of the needs of his or her
plants.
4. Growth Cycle
A. Photoperiod This is the part about how
you make your clones or seedlings (that is to say,
small young plants that consist only of stems and
leaves) into plants with big, fat, juicy
buds.
In the wild, male and female cannabis
plants sprout in the spring, and grow side by side
through the summer. At some point in the summer,
they begin their flowering cycle. Shortly after
that, the males' flowers start to mature, shedding
their pollen into the air, pollinating the
females' adolescent flowers, which then grow
multitudes of seeds. When the frost comes, the
plants die and the seeds are scattered around the
surrounding area. Some seeds may be eaten by birds
or other animals and may be passed through the
animal and dropped in another location, nature's
way of spreading it around. Then comes winter, the
rain and/or snow come, and some of these seeds get
covered with a layer of composted leaves and/or
soil or dung, in the animal case, and soon the
cycle begins again. Spring comes, sun shines, and
behold a seedling- or a whole generation of
seedlings.
When the seeds sprout, it is
early in the spring and the days are much longer
than the nights. The advanced cannabis plant
actually has the ability to measure the length of
each night (thus photoperiod, or a photoperiod
determinate plant). As long as the nights are
short enough, the cannabis plant will grow only
stems and leaves (vegetatively). About halfway
through the summer there comes a point where the
days and nights are equal length (equinox) and it
is about this time that most varieties of cannabis
begin their flowering cycle. First stem and leaf
production will suddenly accelerate; some
varieties will double in size during the first 10
days or two weeks. Then upward growth slows, in
some cases, stopping altogether, and the tedious
slow process of flower production begins. This
continues, buds building on buds for the rest of
the summer until they are ripe. If the males are
removed before they shed their pollen, the females
will continue to flower, hoping for some pollen to
float by. As long as it doesn't, you will
eventually have a crop of ripened 'sinsemillia'
buds.
Indoors, this cycle is very simple to
replicate. You must have two separate areas for
growth. A vegetative area with 24-hour continuous
or 18 hours on, 6 hours off "short night" light
for clones, seedlings and plants that are still to
small "to put into flowering", and another,
usually much larger space in which the light(s)
are on a timer (12 hours on-12 hours off every
day). It is important that during the dark cycle
you do not interrupt your plants' "sleep." Even a
small amount of light reaching the plants for a
short period of time during the dark cycle can
substantially interfere with the flowering cycle,
causing the plants to be set back a week or more
by causing what is known as photoperiod shock,
when a plant can't figure out what season you are
trying to duplicate. It should be pitch dark in
the flowering room for 12 or even 13 hours every
night, and then damn bright for the rest of the
time. Usually after 45 to 60 days of this, if you
have all females, you will be able to recognize
your goal.
Most indoor varieties will
double or triple in size from the time when you
put them on this 12-hour cycle until the time they
are done. For example, a plant that is put into
flowering when it is one foot tall may only reach
a finished height of two or three feet, but a
plant that is two feet tall when you begin
flowering it could grow to be four to six feet
tall and quite a large bush. Larger plants yield
more buds, but take up proportionately more space
and take a longer time to grow to the desired
flowering size than small plants.
This is
why I say that your yield is based more on the
amount of light in your room, not the number of
plants, their size, or the amount of space they
are in. (Light is usually the 'limiting factor'
indoors).
An easily achievable goal should
be 1 pound per 1KW per crop cycle. One pound may
come from two monsters that each take up half the
space under a 1KW light and yield a half-pound
each, or 1 pound might come from 32 1-foot tall
plants that each yield only ? ounce each but will
finish in a relatively shorter time and also take
less time to grow in the vegetative stage to the
desired flowering size, perhaps only 6 or 8
inches.
Larger yields can easily be
achieved per crop utilizing certain varieties with
longer flowering periods, (up to 90 days or more)
but over time, your total yields will probably be
about the same, because you could of had two crops
of a faster, lower yielding variety in the same
time. It is a trade-off no matter how you do it,
it just depends upon your own ideas about what you
want.
It is important just to remember that
assuming all environmental factors are as
described, your overall yield will be determined
primarily by the amount of light and also to some
extent the variety or strain you happen to
have.
B. Sprouting and Cloning I assume you have already read
the section entitled "Cannabis is a Plant." If you
have not, then do so now!
Sprouting
cannabis seeds is a simple matter. Before you
plant your seeds in the soil, you should germinate
them by placing them between two paper towels
soaked with distilled water, placed on a plate and
covered with plastic wrap. Kept in a warm, dark
place, the seeds should sprout in about 3 to 7
days. Gently put the seedling, sprout-end up,
about one-half to one inch below the pre-moistened
soil.
Cloning is a much more complicated
matter. It requires either some skill, or a green
thumb, or fanatical attention to detail, or a lot
of trial and error, or possibly all of the above.
I think of cloning as an incubation process and
have decided that maintaining a constant warm
temperature (75-80) is the key factor.
This
is the concept. Cut a small piece from an existing
plant that is in the vegetative growth stage or
one that has been in flowering for less than 2
weeks, (the key here is that is should not have
any flowers on it) about 3 to 4 inches long. This
piece must be a growing tip of the plant, not a
leaf, (though a clone may have a number of leaves
on it), but a piece on that new growth has been
apparent at its tip. This does not mean that it
has to come from the top of the plant, because on
any healthy, well-established plant there should
be many, or perhaps dozens of growing tips all
over it. Handle this piece gently, and using a new
razor blade, cut a small piece just about 1/16th
of an inch from where the first cut was made, at a
45-degree angle. This exposes the moist, tender
inner portion of the stem. For larger clones you
may want to cut off one set of the lowest leaves
also, leaving approximately 1/16th-inch stubs of
the leaf stems. The razor blade can also be used
to very gently scrape some of the outer skin off
the lower portions of the stem that will be under
the soil, again, for the purpose of exposing the
tender inner portion of the stem. This should all
be done as quickly as possible. Then using rooting
hormone, such as Rootone Powder or Dip-n-Gro
liquid (diluted 13 parts water to 1), dip the
lower part (the part that has been cut and
scraped, the part that will be under the soil) of
the clone into the hormone and then carefully
place it into a hole that was pre-poked in the
media using a nail or toothpick.
You can
use paper, plastic or Styrofoam cups (always poke
holes in the bottom) or small buckets (less than
one-half gallon) to hold the soil, or Jiffy-7 peat
[moss] pellets, which are small discs that when
soaked in water, expand into a cylinder that is
basically just peat moss in a tiny nylon sack.
These work well for larger batches because of
their small size. Place the whole unit inside of
some kind of humidity tent or dome, maybe a
plastic Ziploc bag for one or two clones in party
cups, or a 11x21 inch propagation tray for larger
batches for example, to retain the moisture. Small
pots evaporate quickly, and since the clone has no
roots with which to draw up water, it needs to be
kept in a high humidity atmosphere or it will dry
out and die promptly.
Absolutely the most
important factor is not to over saturate the soil,
it should barely feel moist to the touch.
Remember- for roots to grow, they need oxygen just
as much as they need water. It is as easy to kill
a clone with too much water as it is to kill it by
letting it dry out. Spray bottles work well to
mist the clones. Place the newly planted clones
under fluorescent lights on a continuous 24-hour
per day light cycle. Florescents should be kept
within about a foot or less from the clones for
maximum effectiveness. "Cool white" tubes work
very well and are very inexpensive. They generate
very little heat and have soft, even light
distribution. A 4-foot "shop-light" fixture can be
purchased at the hardware store for less than $10
and two tubes to fit it should run about $1 each.
This is sufficient light for two 11x21 inch
(standard size) propagation trays. Each tray can
hold up to about 25-30 clones in Jiffy-7 pellets.
Keep the temperature steady and warm, and after
about one week, if you are doing well, or two
weeks if you need improvement, roots will suddenly
sprout directly out of the stem and the clone will
start to grow. As soon as this happens, it should
be taken out of the dome, transplanted if
necessary, and moved into the vegetative area, not
too close to the light, not too close to the
fan.
C. Sex and sexing The only way to tell the sex of
a cannabis plant is after it has been flowering
for at least two weeks. Examine the internodes, or
the place where two stems meet. Two little white
hairs in a "V" are a female flower, while
strange-looking bunches of grape like flowers
indicate a male. Make sure to cut the males as
soon as they show their sex unless you want a
batch of seeds with your female buds, in which
case cut all the males except for the best one
(you judge) and then cut it as soon as the little
grapes (pollen sacks) start to pop open. The
branches of these males can be placed in water and
put in a sunny window. The pollen sacks will
continue to pop open for several days and you can
carefully collect an apply the pollen to just the
females you want to seed. Remember that there is
enough pollen in a single male flower to pollinate
thousands of female flowers. If you grow only
females the results will be sinsemilla (Spanish
word for seedless or without
seed).
5. Limiting Factors
There are five limiting
factors to plant growth. Any green plant needs all
five of these things to be available to it or
growth will slow or stop. Each one is just as
important as the others, and more or too much of
one will absolutely not make up for lack of any
other. Limiting factors are each a link in the
chain. The weak link is the one that is slowing
the plants down. If you think you have a problem,
it is most likely one of these five
things.
A. Water Plants need water. All
residential water supplies are treated with
chlorine which is not good for plants. Evaporate
the chlorine out of the water by leaving it in
open containers such as milk jugs or barrels for
24 to 48 hours before using.
The proper way
to water an established plant is to saturate the
soil, then do not water again until the soil feels
dry at the tip of your finger poked into the soil,
and the container feels light. You can tell just
by watching the plants. Experienced growers who
are intimate with their plants can tell that they
will need to be watered 2 or even 3 days before
they do simply by looking at them. Lower leaves
may lose their turgidity, and the whole plant,
though seemingly unaffected, may actually seem to
shrink. The moment they start to droop you have
waited too long. Overwatering is a most common
mistake. Usually, the plant is not growing
satisfactorily due to another limiting factor, and
the hapless cultivator tries to give it more and
more water and/or fertilizer, essentially drowning
the roots and killing the plant.
B. Light People who are not
familiar with the 1KW lighting systems that are
commonly used in northwestern grow rooms are often
shocked at the blinding light intensities that
they can generate. Sometimes I like to turn the
lights off and point out to them how dark it is
without them. No man made light source will ever
match the intensity of the sun. Without adequate
light or light in the correct [color] spectrums,
green plants will not grow. Cannabis is arguably
the most light-loving plant species on the planet.
A cannabis plant that does not get enough light
will be sad and spindly with small leaves and buds
and a lot of stem. If you follow the directions in
here under 'lighting', you should not have a
problem. Don't be suprised if it seems bright,
it's supposed to be. In fact, I have taken to
wearing mountaineering sunglasses with side panels
and U.V. protection whenever I am in my grow
rooms, due to the fact that I have noticed my
vision deteriorate over the years, undoubtedly
from constant exposure. These type of shades also
have rubber hooks that go around the backs of your
ears to keep them on your head when you are
looking down all the time.
C. Nutrients Chemical fertilizers are the
easiest way to maintain the nutrient needs of a
large garden. These should not be associated with
strange tasting or "chemical" tasting buds. Many
of the best soil growers use high quality, mass
produced, full spectrum nutrient formulas to
produce top quality cannabis. Also the vast
majority of all hydroponic gardens use full
spectrum chemical fertilizers due to a lack of
completely water soluble organic liquids. The only
thing you can do to blow it is to overfertilize.
Follow directions. Your plants will tell you when
they need fertilizer. A well-fertilized plant will
be dark green and vigorous, while a plant that
needs fertilizer will be a slightly pale green and
have yellowing leaves and slow growth. You know
you fertilized at the right time if they are back
thriving in the next few days. Always remember
that more fertilizer won't help if any of the
other limiting factors are not taken care
of.
However, there is another group of
people that insist that only organic nutrients,
such as various guanos (a.k.a. turds), blood meal,
bone meal, various seaweeds, or organic composts
etc. be used to provide the nutrient needs for the
very most premium flower production. I have
experimented with organics and had great results,
with increases in resin production (not
nessecarily THC production), and overall health,
and also a slightly more pungent smell and
sometimes slightly enhanced taste, but I believe
that for the most part, these differences are
extremely subtle and noticable only to the
connoisseur. For production purposes, I always end
up coming back to the "grow juice" as it's called,
just because it's easier. Actually, it smells
better too.
D. Oxygen Only the plant's roots need
oxygen. They absorb it in the same way that leaves
absorb carbon dioxide, and use it to build sugars
and carbohydrates (grow). Oxygen is the main
component of the air we breathe. This is the
reason why over watering is a problem. As the soil
dries out the roots are exposed to oxygen. If the
soil remains saturated, the roots are starved of
oxygen, suffocating, basically
drowned.
E. Carbon Dioxide The leaves of all green plants
absorb carbon dioxide out of the air, use the
carbon, and transpire the leftover O2, or oxygen,
into the air. This absorbsion is the equivalent of
our breathing, except that humans and animals
absorb oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide as a
by-product. One theory of why plants like you to
talk to them is that they are being bathed in a
stream of carbon dioxide-rich air. For cannabis,
this must be similar to a pro athlete breathing
from an oxygen tank.
If the air in the room
is stagnant the plants will quickly use up the
carbon dioxide and stop growing. Adequate carbon
dioxide levels can be maintained with good
ventilation and by having vigorous air circulation
around the plants. Carbon dioxide enrichment
systems are available, but they were the first
thing to go when I edited for simplicity. I'll
leave them to the adventurous. I personally think
that if mother nature doesn't need it, neither do
I. However, I should mention that if you are using
a hydroponic rockwool-based system, by adding CO2
enrichment, you have essentially eliminated four
out of five of the limiting factors, water,
nutrients, oxygen and CO2. Using extremely high
light levels in addition to this setup can result
in what can only be described as
"super-charging".
6. Potency, maturity, harvesting and drying
A. When to Harvest The single most important
factor in the potency of your crop of cannabis is
the plants themselves. Any given clone or seedling
has a pre-determined, genetically set, potential
potency in its DNA. Once you have finished, dried
and sampled a certain healthy, mature bud, a clone
of that plant will only vary about 5 to 10 percent
in potency no matter what techniques are used to
grow it. Good buds are born, not made.
The
second most important factor is the maturity, or
ripeness of the buds. As the buds get bigger and
bigger, you will notice that some of the hairs
(pistils) on the buds which were all white to
begin with, will start to wither and turn red.
When about 65 to 75 percent of the all the hairs
on the buds have turned red and new growth seems
to slow (usually after about 45 to 60 days in the
flowering cycle for most pure indicas and 50/50
hybrids), the buds should be ripe for
harvest.
Something else to watch is the
crystals, which should appear under a magnifying
glass like tiny clear mushrooms of resin. If they
begin to tint amber or yellow, it is a sign that
the THC (which is concentrated 95 percent in these
crystals) is starting to degrade into two less
psychoactive byproducts: CBD and CBN. If you
notice this happening the plant has already
reached its maximum potential and should be
harvested immediately unless it is very large,
possibly in which case individual parts of the
plant may ripen before others. Once again, every
one of the infinite number of cannabis varieties
is different, and with "faster" strains, (that is,
varities that finish sooner), you have to be more
careful about this over-ripening, whereas some
strains seem to continue on flowering forever
without ever ripening as it is described here. You
just have to watch and use your good judgment. If
you aren't sure, then wait. The last few weeks is
the time when buds are bulking up the most
weight-wise, and with a good sized crop, days can
turn into extra ounces. When you have waited this
long, you can wait a little longer.
B. Harvesting, Manicuring and
Drying Harvesting is easy. Cut the
plant into manageable sections and trim all the
large multi-fingered leaves off of the buds.
Single-fingered leaves that stick out of the thick
part of the buds should be trimmed to the
circumference of the bud. These trimmings, when
properly dried, make good joint rolling
material.
When you are manicuring, you may
find yourself with an unbelievably sticky coating
on your fingers and scissors. This is almost pure
resin, otherwise known as finger hash. If you
start out with clean hands and clean scissors, you
can collect this substance by gently rubbing your
fingers together in small circles. Do not try to
use heavy pressure between your fingers. This
stuff is so sticky I have seen it take skin off.
You might not mind losing a bit of skin but
smoking it is no fun. Instead gentle circles will
produce little tiny pieces that look like the dust
from a pencil eraser. These pieces can be rolled
together into small BB sized balls. Scissors can
be scraped in a process a lot like pipe scraping.
All of these little pieces together can add up to
hours of quality entertainment for a room full of
stoners, if you know what I mean. It is best to
use a small piece of bud underneath these resin
balls (a green screen) because like pipe resin it
melts when a flame touches it and will go right
through a screen. Extra stickiness comes off your
fingers effortlessly with a little butter or
margarine (don't try to smoke this).
Hang
the manicured buds on some hemp twine (like
clotheslines) in the drying room. The idea of
hanging is to facilitate even, thorough drying.
Although they can be laid out on newspapers, I
found that this leaves unsightly flat spots on the
buds and they can remain wet for longer because
the air cannot circulate around all sides. Keep
tematures moderate, around 75 and around 50%
humidity. You may need to use a ventilation system
to reduce humidity if your drying room is
particularily crowded (I hope you have this
problem!), or a heater if it is too cold. I
recommend placing a small fan in the room to
circulate the air, especially if using a heater.
Usually in about seven days, your buds will be
ready to smoke. Do not be fooled if after three or
four days the buds feel dry to the touch. If put
into bags, the moisture that remains on the inside
will transpire into the outer dry parts and will
result in an unacceptable degree of
wetness.
Now, I've really tried to keep the
commentary to a minimum here, and cannabis knows,
it's hard when you are the writer, editor and
publisher, BUT, this rant I must
have.
Improperly dried cannabis is
unacceptable for smoking and useless for
enlightenment purposes. One of the reasons that
cannabis is commonly sold wholesale, to smiling
customers, for as much as the going rate for gold,
is because the grower has had to dry it out before
selling it. This drying cannot be veiwed as losing
money. No one should ever have to pay this amount
of money for water. Drying is merely the process
of evaporating water, purifying the buds down to
just the essence of their remarkable
existence.
As the buds dry, clorophyl
breaks down into more simple, easy-burning sugars.
Harsh smoking characteristics such as a green or
shakey taste diminish. The true unadulterated
flavor can come through. The THC itself evaporates
a water molecule, making the THC psychoactive,
giving the high a greater feeling of spaciousness,
enhanced perception and appreciation of beauty, as
well as seemingly miraculous medical
benefits.
The buds attain a level of
combustabillity such that you will be able to
crumble them into a firm, lip-smacking, even
burning spliff of Rasta revelry, or receive a
prompt flow of thick, cool, flavorful smoke from
your favorite waterpipe, as soon as the flame
touches the bud.
Needless to say, the
disappointment to the consumer of not being able
to get stoned after finally acquiring the desired
object, a bag of weed, at great time and expense
to all, is definitley severe. This is compounded
when you are one of the ever growing number of
people who use this substance to relieve pain and
suffering incomprehensible to healthy people. Dry
cannabis is the balm of the sick, a miracle
cure-all. Ask them.
Every stoner knows that
kind, dry buds are probabally the single greatest
gift to mankind ever. If you do not plan on
thoroughly drying the buds you grow with every bit
as much care as you took growing them, then you
shall not be worthy of the title "cannabis
creator" and I should now beg and implore you to:
(A.) give this guide to someone who will, or (B.)
burn this guide. Why? Because I wouldn't want
anyone thinking that I was associated with you.
Selling undried buds, even at wholesale prices is
a definite karma no-no, and smoking them is
totally defeating the purpose.
I know there
are money hungry people out there- it's even
considered normal in our materialistic consumer
based society. Thats the greatest thing about this
occupation- you can set your own salary by growing
as much cannabis as you want- but the way for a
righteous non-greedy cannabis creator to estimate
yields (and therefore profits) is simply, only on
a dried basis, Thank you.
This concludes
The Home Cannabis creator, everything you ever
wanted to know about cannabis creation but were
afraid you would be detected by the power company.
Good luck and a happy high!
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