Growing Hydroponic Marijuana
......Various Extras
Breeding
Carbon Dioxide
EC, TDS, PPM
Heat
Humidity
Media
Number Of Plants
Nutrients
Odors
pH
Temperature
Two Growing Areas
Various Extras
Breeding: It is possible to breed and select
cuttings from plants that grow, flower, and mature faster. Some
plants will naturally be better than others in this regard, and it
is easy to select not only the most potent plants to clone or breed,
but the fastest growing/flowering plants as well.
Find your fastest growth plant, and breed it with your best high
male for fast flowering, potent strains. Clone your fastest, best
high plant for the quickest mono-crop garden possible. Over time, it
will save you a lot of waiting around for your plants to mature.
When a male is starting to flower (2-4 weeks before the females)
it should be removed from the females so it does not pollinate them.
It is taken to a separate area. Any place that gets just a few hours
of light per day will be adequate. Put newspaper or glass under it
to catch the pollen as the flowers drop it.
Save pollen in an air tight bag in the freezer.
It will be good for about a month. It may be several more weeks
before the females are ready to pollinate. Put a paper towel in the
bag with it to absorb moisture.
A plant is ready to pollinate 2 weeks after the clusters of
female flowers first appear. If you pollinate too early, it may not
work. Wait until the female flowers are well established, but still
when the hairs are white (before they turn red/brown).
Turn off all fans. Use a paper bag to pollinate a branch of a
female plant. Use different pollen from two males on separate
branches. Wrap the bag around the branch and seal it at the opening
to the branch. Shake the branch vigorously. After a few minutes,
carefully remove it.
Large plastic zip-lock bags can be used also.
Slip the bag over the male branch and shake the pollen loose.
Carefully remove the bag and zip it up. It should be very dusty with
pollen. To pollinate, place it over a single branch of the female,
zipping it up sideways around the stem so no pollen leaks out.
Shake the bag and the stem at the same time. Allow to settle for
an hour or two and shake it again. Remove it a few hours later. Your
branch is now well pollinated and should show signs of visible seed
production in 2 weeks. One pollinated branch can create hundreds of
seeds, so it should not be necessary to pollinate more than one or
two branches in many cases.
When crossing two different strains, a third strain of marijuana
plant will be created. If you know what characteristics your looking
for in a new strain, you will need several plants to choose from in
order to have the best chance of finding all the qualities desired.
Sometimes, if the two plants bred had dominant
genes for certain characteristics, it will be impossible to get the
plant you want from one single cross. In this case, it is necessary
to interbreed two plants from the same batch of resultant seeds from
the initial cross. In this fashion, recessive genes will become
available, and the plant character you desire may only be possible
in this manner.
Usually, it is desirable only to cross two strains that are very
different. In this manner, one usually arrives at what is referred
to as hybrid vigor. In other words, often the best strains are
created by taking two very different strains and mating them. Less
robust plants may be the result of interbreeding, since it opens up
recessive gene traits that may lead to reduced potency.
Hybrid offspring will all be very different from each other. Each
plant grown from the same batch of seeds collected from the same
plant, will be different. It is then necessary to try each plant
separately and decide it's individual merits for yourself. If you
find one that seems to be head and shoulders above the rest in terms
of early flowering, high yield, and high, that is the plant to clone
and continue breeding.
In depth genetics is beyond the scope of this work. See marijuana
botany and/or the
cannabis breeder's bible, for more detailed info in this area.
Carbon Dioxide (CO2): Marijuana plants use CO2
when the light is on, so you will have to provide them with a
constant fresh supply. In a room with no air circulation, plants
will use the available carbon dioxide in a few hours.
When CO2 levels fall, plant growth slows. Letting in air through
a window, door, or other means (and keeping it circulating with a
fan) will be necessary.
Carbon Dioxide is measured in parts per million (ppm). The ideal
CO2 level for marijuana plants is near 700 ppm. Some advanced
growers increase the amount of CO2 to the grow area so the plants
have a steady concentration of about 700 ppm.
An optimal amount of CO2 will increase the growth rate of the
marijuana plant. Although this does not mean a more potent crop, it
will produce a larger harvest in less time than a crop raised with
less CO2.
Adding carbon dioxide to a grow room is not something for the
beginner to experiment with unless you have a cheap and easily
obtainable supply with a means of measuring it. Here are some CO2
levels and how they affect plant growth.
200 ppm (Plant Growth Slows)
300 ppm (Outside Air)
700
ppm (Ideal For Marijuana)
2000 ppm (Plants Burn)
5000 ppm
(Plants Die)
If you vent the air out of a grow room with an exhaust system
that removes air from a grow room, most (or all) of the CO2 will be
removed from the grow area before the plants can use it. An air
cooled lighting system that takes in and exhausts the air from
places other than the grow room is suggested when CO2 is being used.
EC, TDS, PPM, CF:
EC stands for
Electrical Conductivity. It is measured in mS/cm (miliSiemens per
centimeter). It is method of measuring the amount of dissolved
solids in nutrient solution.
TDS stands for Total Dissolved
Solids. It is measured in PPM (parts per million). It is also a
method of measuring the amount of dissolved solids in nutrient
solution.
EC meters and TDS meters are both used to
determine the strength of the hydroponic solution. Making sure the
nutrient solution is optimal would be something intermediate and
advanced hydroponic marijuana growers would want to monitor.
If you are a first time or beginning
grower, this is not as important as the pH level and temperature.
After you raise a few crops you will probably want to provide the
ideal growing conditions for maximum potency and yield. Measuring
the amount of dissolved solids in nutrient solution and keeping them
within the proper range will be something to work on.
In my
case, a good EC meter reading (for the marijuana strains that have
been grown) has been about 0.7 to 1.5 mS during the vegetative phase
and 1.0 to 2.0 mS during the flowering phase. You can increase the
EC meter reading by adding more nutrients to the nutrient reservoir.
You can decrease the EC meter reading by diluting the nutrients in
the reservoir with more water.
A good TDS meter reading for
marijuana during the vegetative phase is about 450 to 1000 PPM.
During flowering a good TDS meter reading would be about 700 to 1500
ppm. You can increase the PPM value by adding more nutrients to the
nutrient reservoir. You can decrease the PPM value by diluting the
nutrients in the reservoir with more water.
These
values work for me but the numbers that are optimal for
your setup may vary somewhat depending on pH level, temperature,
seed strain, etc. Take EC and TDS readings after nutrients have been
added to the reservoir, then check every few days.
Some
strains need more nutrients than others, start by aiming towards EC
and TDS readings on the low side of the scale and work up slowly.
Optimal amounts will vary with the strain so experiment but keep
within the limits mentioned above.
If you are going to get a
meter to measure the amount of dissolved solids in your hydroponic
nutrient solution, get an EC meter rather than a TDS meter. EC
meters are more accurate than TDS meters.
A CF meter uses CF
(Conductivity Factor) scale. This is simply the EC scale multiplied
by ten (1 mS = 10 CF). To find the EC with a CF meter just divide
the CF meter reading by ten
(10 CF = 1 mS).
Heat: Grow lights get hot and heat can be a
problem. The more watts of light you use, the more heat those lights
generate. Even 250 watt lights can heat a small area beyond
acceptable limits. If the temperature gets too hot it could have a
negative effect on the plants by slowing down growth or killing
them.
Some growers use an air conditioner to cool the air, others
prefer to vent hot air from the ceiling into another room, attic, or
outside through the chimney, roof, or wall. Your local hardware
store should have some kind of exhaust system. I've seen bathroom
fan, dryer vent, and other similar systems adapted to serve this
purpose. There are also air
cooled lighting systems to remove heat produced by lights before
the air can affect the grow area.
If you are using more than 250 watts of lighting, you will
probably have to use an exhaust system. If not, you will need a
large air conditioner that will run constantly. Your electric bills
will be very high. Large commercial operations use industrial
exhaust fans that cost several hundred dollars each. An exhaust
system should be able to move a volume of air equal to the room size
every 3-5 minutes.
Humidity: Use a hydrometer to measure humidity
if you think your grow area is out of range. A humidifier can
increase humidity and a dehumidifier can be used to lower humidity.
In general readings between 40-60 percent relative humidity are
recommended.
The humidity should always be kept below 60% to minimize the
chances of mold development. If mold is a problem in your grow room,
humidity should always be kept below 50%.
Media: Since you aren't using soil in a
hydroponic garden, some types of hydroponic gardens (deep water
culture, drip systems, ebb and flow systems, wick systems) need a
substitute so the roots have somewhere to anchor the plant.
This substitute for soil is referred to as growing medium or
media. The media will provide no nutrition, it is just a support for
the roots. All nutrition comes from the nutrient solution.
There are various types of media available to grow hydroponic
marijuana in. Rockwool is one common type of media, but there are
others. Rockwool comes in blocks of solid material that are very
similar in feel and appearance to fiberglass insulation used in
housebuilding.
There are some types of media that are made up
of loose particles like soil. Stay away from these unless your
hydroponic garden is designed to use this type of media. Particles
can drain into the nutrient reservoir and eventually ruin the pump.
The media you use is up to you. Follow what the manufacturer of
your hydroponic garden recommends. If you aren't sure, get rockwool (also
known as mineral wool), horticube (also known as oasis cubes), or
another solid type of media. You can buy some types of growing media
in slabs that can be cut to fit into your garden or you can get it
in various pre-cut sizes.
There are also small rockwool and oasis cubes designed for
starting clones or seeds on. You can germinate seeds right on these.
Once you've grown a crop or two you can experiment and see if
changing media has any effect.
Rockwool must be soaked in water overnight
before use. Sometimes this should be water of a certain pH. This is
to ensure that the rockwool has a neutral pH level. Follow the
manufacturers directions.
If there are no directions, soak the rockwool (overnight) in a
clean pot or container with tap water that has been pH adjusted to
5.5. Next day, discard the water, and fill the pot or container with
boiling water to kill any unwanted organisms that might have a
negative effect on your plants.
After a minimum of ten minutes in the boiling water, you can
drain the container and wait for the rockwool to cool to room
temperature. Once cool, the rockwool is ready for use.
Number Of Plants: In many areas, drug
trafficking charges are determined by the number of plants being
grown. In these areas a plant that produces two ounces (about 56
grams) at harvest time is considered the same as a plant that
produces one-eighth of an ounce (about 3.5 grams) at harvest time.
Even if you had a permit to produce medical marijuana for
yourself, once you grow more than a set number of plants in certain
jurisdictions, you are considered to be cultivating with intent to
traffic. So growing 10-20 fairly large plants that will produce an
ounce (or more) per plant might be a better idea than growing 40-80
smaller plants that will produce a quarter ounce per plant.
Nutrients: See the page about nutrients and
growing hydroponic marijuana to find out how nutrients affect
marijuana plant growth.
Odors: Growing (and smoking) marijuana will
produce odors. Sometimes they can be strong enough to attract
attention of people who don't need to know what you are doing. If
you would like to eliminate the smell from growing and/or smoking
marijuana the best thing to do is use ozone.
An alternative method is to use exhaust fans, these have the
advantage of also being used to remove heat from the grow room. If
you plan on using an exhaust system, make sure it is used in an area
that won't attract attention. Placing it on a roof or other space
that is seldom used by other people is a good idea.
pH: The pH of the nutrient solution should be
somewhere in between 5.5 and 6.8 on the pH scale. You will need a pH
meter or pH test kit to check the pH and some pH up-down solution to
adjust the pH when it gets out of range. See the page about pH and marijuana
if you would like to learn more.
Temperature: Aim for between 70-80 degrees F
when the light is on. When the light is off the temperature can drop
10-15 degrees without harming the plants. The temperature should
never go very much below 60 degrees or above 90 degrees (even for
short periods) or growth will slow down. If these extremes are
exceeded for an extended amount of time, the plant may be
permanently damaged or killed.
Every strain has an optimal day temperature and an optimal night
temperature. The closer you get to the optimal temperature of the
marijuana strain you are growing, the better your plants will grow.
Strains that originated in cool areas prefer a lower temperature
than strains that originated in warm areas.
Some strains might like temperatures outside of the 70-80 degree
range but most will do best somewhere in between 72-75 degrees.
Plants grown with supplemental carbon dioxide prefer temperatures
around 80-85 degrees.
Two Growing Areas: An alternative to growing in
one area with mh and hps lighting is to set up separate vegetative
and a flowering areas.
The vegetative area would use a cloner or something similar that
would allow seeds or clones to grow. Light would be supplied by two
standard 24 inch or 48 inch fluorescent bulbs (or more), turned on
20-24 hours a day. Use 30-60 watt (40 watt bulbs are recommended)
cool white fluorescent tubes.
A cloner is a hydroponic based growing unit designed for growing
small plants. The openings to place the plants in are close
together, so more plants can grow in a small area. When the plants
have grown large enough, they are moved to the flowering area.
The flowering area would use a standard
hydroponic set up with hps and/or mh fixtures turned on for 12 hours
a day. While the flowering plants are going through their cycle, the
germinated seeds or clones will have a 8 to 10 weeks to develop in
the cloner.
After the flowering plants have been harvested, the plants in the
vegetative area are ready to move to the flowering area. New
seedlings or clones can then be started in the cloner.
There are three main benefits to this kind of set up. Electricity
use will be about 20% to 35% less because the mh or hps light is
only on 12 hours a day. The longer a plant has been growing in the
vegetative phase, the quicker it will flower.
And you will be able to produce more marijuana
because you will harvest about once every 6 to 10 weeks, rather than
only being able to harvest about once every 12 to 16 weeks with a
single growing area.
The only drawback I have found is the extra area needed to set up
two different grow areas. Since the flowering plants need absolute
darkness during the dark phase, the light from the vegetative area
can't reach the flowering plants.
These areas will have need to be isolated from each other and
other sources of light either by using curtains (or something
similar) or by being located away from each other.
Any available sunlight will help in the growing process. The
vegetative area can be open to extra light at all times but there
must be a way to block out all sources of light for twelve hours a
day in the flowering area.
----- A plant will die if the roots dry out.
Check everyday (or more often) and make sure that the nutrient
solution is being circulated properly. Drip systems and ebb and flow
systems can keep a plant alive for up to a day (sometimes longer) if
the nutrient supply is stopped. A plant in an NFT systems will die
within hours of the nutrient solution being stopped and a plant in
an aeroponic system probably won't last an hour.
Deep water culture is based on the roots being in the same
reservoir as the nutrient solution. There is no chance of the roots
drying out unless the reservoir isn't filled. However, the roots
must be supplied with oxygen (usually supplied with an air pump). If
this supply of oxygen is stopped, the plants will die in several
days.
----- Do not use chemicals to clean anything
that the water and nutrients will come into contact with, like the
inside of nutrient reservoir or hydroponic garden. Use hot water to
clean these.
----- Never touch a metal halide or high
pressure sodium bulb with your hands. Body oils will shorten the
life of the bulb. If you do touch a bulb, wash it off with a clean
cloth that has been dampened with water. Wait till the bulb is dry
before using, water can cause the bulb to crack. A lit (or hot) bulb
can crack or explode if it comes in contact with liquids like water.
----- You can only use a bulb of the wattage you
light system was designed for. A 400 watt system only uses 400 watt
bulbs. Don't use any other wattage than the one listed on the
ballast of your light system.
----- You can use hydroponics to grow outdoors
but temperatures must remain within the tolerance of the plant. That
means in most parts of the world, you would only be able to grow for
several months of the year. Temperatures must also remain higher
than the freezing point of water. Evaporation of nutrient solution
can also be a problem.
----- When you enter the growing environment.
You should be as clean as possible. Taking a shower and changing
clothes prior to entering would be a good idea but time consuming.
Try to at least wash your face and hands and have clean clothes on
prior to entry. This will minimize the chance of contamination.
Books
Jorge Cervantes' Ultimate Grow DVD
This movie shows step by step instructions covering what is
involved in setting up a grow room and growing a crop of marijuana
indoors (with soil or hydroponics). It won't teach advanced
techniques but it will help you set up your grow room and raise your
first crop. There is very little information about growing outdoors,
this is for indoor growers.
Jorge
Cervantes' Ultimate Grow DVD
Jorge Cervantes' Ultimate Grow DVD 2
Similar to Jorge Cervantes' Ultimate Grow DVD (above), but this
version focuses more on growing outdoors. It won't teach advanced
techniques but it will help you set up and raise your first crop
outdoors. There is very little information about growing indoors,
this is for outdoor growers.
Jorge
Cervantes' Ultimate Grow DVD 2
Grow Great Marijuana:
An Uncomplicated Guide to
Growing
the World's Finest Cannabis
If you find instructions and books about growing hydroponic
marijuana overly technical and hard to follow, this book is a very
good choice for simple and accurate instructions. It does not cover
advanced techniques so if you already know how to grow, this book
would be of little value. But if you are a first time grower with no
experience, this is the first book to look at.
It will explain the steps involved from start to finish (with
text and images). Includes information on where to grow, type of
hydroponic system to use, selecting a seed strain, lighting, fans,
nutrients, security, clones, vegetative growth, flowering,
harvesting, stress, pests, and more. Recommended for beginners only,
this will show you everything you need to raise a hydroponic
marijuana crop.
Grow
Great Marijuana
Marijuana Horticulture:
The Indoor/Outdoor Medical Grower's
Bible
Over 500 pages with more than 1000 color images. If you were only
going to get one book about growing, this book would be the best
choice. Describes growing marijuana outdoors and indoors (with
hydroponics or soil).
Also provides information that you can refer back to when things
go wrong. A very comprehensive reference book for anyone interested
in growing marijuana, either indoors or outdoors. Recommended for
beginners and more advanced growers.
Marijuana
Horticulture
The Cannabis Grow Bible:
The Definitive Guide to Growing
Marijuana
for Recreational and Medical Use
A very good source of information covering all aspects of
growing, from seed selection to harvest, curing and more. Over 300
pages with almost 200 color and black-and-white photographs, charts,
and tables. Recommended reference book for indoor and outdoor
growers.
A great marijuana growing and breeding guide. Includes chapters
on seeds, propagation and germination, growing indoors, growing
outdoors, hydroponics, pre-flowering and flowering, predators, pests
and plant fungi, breeding, and more.
The
Cannabis Grow Bible
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