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- -+- The Merry Pranksters from Menlo Park -+-
- 10.1990.01.01.01
-
- Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - Part 1 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Marijuana : The Plant"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- It is recommended that you buy the book that these files are taken from.
- Many charts and some chapters have been omitted.
- Besides, Ed might need the money.
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- Cannabis probably evolved in the Himalayan foothills, but its origins are
- clouded by the plant's early symbiotic relationship with humans. It has
- been grown for three products - the seeds, which are used as a grainlike
- food and animal feed and for oil; its fiber, which is used for cloth and
- rope; and its resin, which is used medically and recreationally since it
- contains the group of psychoactive substances collectively known as
- Tetra-hydrocannibinol, usually referred to as THC. Plants grown for seed
- or fiber are usually referred to as hemp and contain small amounts of THC.
- Plants grown for THC and for the resin are referred to as marijuana.
- Use of cannabis and its products spread quickly throughout the world.
- Marijuana is now cultivated in climates ranging from the Arctic to the
- equator. Cannabis has been evolving for hundreds of thousands of
- generations on its own and through informal breeding programs by farmers. A
- diverse group of varieties has evolved or been developed as a result of
- breeders' attempts to create a plant that is efficient at producing the
- desired product, which flourishes under particular environmental conditions.
- Cannabis easily escapes from cultivation and goes "wild." For instance,
- in the American midwest, stands of hemp "weed" remain from the 1940's
- plantings. These plants adapt on a population level to the particular
- environmental conditions that the plants face; the stand's genetic pool, and
- thus the plants' characteristics, evolve over a number of generations.
- Varieties differ in growth characteristics such as height, width,
- branching traits, leaf size, leaf shape, flowering time, yield, potency,
- taste, type of hig, and aroma. For the most part, potency is a factor of
- genetics. Some plants have the genetic potential of producing high grade
- marijuana and others do not. The goal of the cultivator is to allow the
- high THC plants to reach their full potential.
- Marijuana is a fast growing annual plant, although some varieties in some
- warm areas overwinter. It does best in a well-drained medium, high in
- fertility. It requires long periods of unobstructed bright light daily.
- Marijuana is usually dioecious; plants are either male or female, although
- some varieties are monoecious - they have male and female flowers on the
- same plant.
- Marijuana's annual cycle begins with germination in the early spring.
- The plant grows vigorously for several months. The plant begins to flower
- in the late summer or early fall and sets seed by late fall. The seeds drop
- as the plant dies as a result of changes in the weather.
- Indoors, the grower has complete control of the environment. The
- cultivator determines when the plants are to be started, when they will
- flower, whether they are to produce seed and even if they are to bear a
- second harvest.
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - Part 2 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Choosing A Variety"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- Gardeners can grow a garden with only one or two varieties or a
- potpourri. Each has its advantages. Commercial growers usually prefer
- homogenous gardens because the plants tatse the same and mature at the same
- time. These growers usually choose fast maturing plants so that there is a
- quick turnaround. Commercial growers often use clones or cuttings from one
- plant so that the garden is genetically idential; the clones have exactly
- the same growth habits and potency.
- Homegrowers are usually more concerned with quality than with fast
- maturity. Most often, they grow mixed groups of plants so they have a
- selection of potency, quality of the high, and taste. Heterogeneous gardens
- take longer to mature and have a lower yield than homogenous gardens. They
- take more care, too, because the plants grow at different rates, have
- different shapes and require varying amounts of space. The plants require
- individual care.
- Marijuana grown in the United States is usually one of two main types:
- inidica or sativa. Indica plants originated in the Hindu-Kush valleys in
- central Asia, which is located between the 25-35 latitudes. The weather
- there is changeable. One year there may be drought, the next it might be
- cloudy, wet, rainy or sunny. For the population to survive, the plant group
- needs to have individuals which survive and thrive under different
- conditions. Thus, in any season, no matter what the weather, some plants
- will do well and some will do poorly.
- Indica was probably developed by hash users for resin content, not for
- flower smoking. The resin was removed from the plant. An indication of
- indica's development is the seeds, which remain enclosed and stick to the
- resin. Since they are very hrd to disconnect from the plant, they require
- human help. Wild plants readily drop seeds once they mature.
- Plants from the same line from equatorial areas are usually fairly
- uniform. These include Colombians and central Africans. Plants from higher
- latitudes of the same line sometimes have very different characteristics.
- These include Southern Africans, Northern Mexicans, and indicas. The plants
- look different from each other and have different maturities and potency.
- The ratio of THC (the ingredient which is psychoactive) to CBD (its
- precursor, which often leaves the smoker feeling disoriented, sleepy,
- drugged or confused) also varies.
- High latitude sativas have the same general characteristics: they tend to
- mature early, have compact short branches and wide, short leaves which are
- dark green, sometimes tinged purple.
- Indica buds are usually tight, heavy, wide and thick rather than long.
- They smell "stinky", "skunky", or "pungent" and their smoke is thick - a
- small toke can induce coughing. The best indicas have a relaxing "social
- high" which allow one to sense and feel the environment but do not lead to
- thinking about or analyzing the experience.
- Cannabis sativa plants are found throughout the world. Potent varieties
- such as Colombian, Panamanian, Mexican, Nigerian, Congolese, Indian and Thai
- are found in equatorial zones. These plants require a long time to mature
- and ordinarily grow in areas where they have a long season. They are
- usually very potent, containing large quanities of THC and virtually no CBD.
- They have long, medium-thick buds when they are grown in full equatorial
- sun, but under artificial light or even under the temperate sun, the buds
- tend to run (not fill out completely). The buds usually smell sweet or
- tangy and the smoke is smooth, sometimes deceptively so.
- The THC to CBD ratio of sativa plants gets lower as the plants are found
- further from the equator. Jamaican and Central Mexican varieties are found
- at the 15-20th latitudes. At the 30th latitude, varieties such as Southern
- African and Northern Mexican are variable and may contain equal amounts of
- THC and CBD, giving the smoker and buzzy, confusing high. These plants are
- used mostly for hybridizing. Plants found above the 30th latitude usually
- have low levels of THC, with high levels of CBD and are considered hemp.
- If indica and sativa varieties are considered opposite ends of a
- spectrum, most plants fall in between the spectrum. Because of marijuana
- and hemp's long symbiotic relationship with humans, seeds are constantly
- procured or traded so that virtually all populations have been mixed with
- foreign plants at one time or another.
- Even in traditional marijuana-growing countries, the marijuana is often
- the result of several cross lines. Jamaican ganja, for example, is probably
- the result of crosses between hemp, which the English cultivated for rope,
- and Indian ganja, which arrived with the Indian immigrants who came to the
- country. The term for marijuana in Jamaic in ganja, the same as in India.
- The traditional Jamaican term for the best weed is Kali, named for the
- Indian killer goddess.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - Part 3 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Growth and Flowering"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- The cannabis plant regulates its growth and flowering stages by measuring
- the changes in the number of hours of uniterrupted darkness to determine
- when to flower. The plant produces a hormone (phytochrome) begining at
- germination. When this chemical builds up to a critical level, the plant
- changes its mode from vegetative growth to flowering. This chemical is
- destroyed in the presence of even a few moments of light. During the late
- spring and early summer there are many more hours of light than darkness and
- the hormone does not build up to a critical level. However, as the days
- grow shorter and there are longer periods of uniterrupted darkness, the
- hormone builds up to a critical level.
- Flowering occurs at different times with different varieties as a result
- of the adaptation of the varieties to the environment. Varieties from the
- 30th latitude grow in an area with a temperate climate and fairly early
- fall. These plants usually trigger in July or August and are ready to
- harvest in September or October. Southern African varieties often flower
- with as little as 8 or 9 hours of darkness/15 to 16 hours of light. Other
- 30th latitude varieties including most indicas flower when the darkness
- cycle lasts a minimum of 9 to 10 hours. Jamaican and some Southeast Asian
- varieties will trigger at 11 hours of darkness and ripen during September or
- October.
- Equatorial varieties trigger at 12 hours or more of darkness. This means
- that they will not start flowering before late September or early October
- and will not mature until late November or early December.
- Of course, indoors the plants' growth stage can be regulated with the
- flick of a switch. Nevertheless, the plants respond to the artificial light
- cycle in the same way that they do to the natural seasonal cycles.
- The potency of the plant is related to its maturity rather than
- chronological age. Genetically identical 3 month and 6 month-old plants
- which have mature flowers have the same potency. Starting from seed, a six
- month old plant flowers slightly faster and fills out more than a 3 month
- old plant.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - Part 4 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Choosing a Space"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- Almost any area can be converted to a growing space. Attics, basements,
- spare rooms, alcoves and even shelves can be used. Metal shacks, garages
- and greenhouses are ideal areas. All spaces must be located in an area
- inaccessible to visitors and invisible from the street.
- The ideal area is at least 6 feet high, with a minimum of 50 square feet,
- an area about 7 feet by 7 feet. A single 1,000 watt metal halide or sodium
- vapor lamp, the most efficient means of illuminating a garden, covers an
- area this size.
- Gardeners who have smaller spaces, at least one foot wide and several
- feet long, can use fluorescent tubes, 400 watt metal halides, or sodium
- vapor lamps.
- Gardeners who do not have a space even this large to spare can use
- smaller areas (See part 17 - "Novel Gardens").
- Usually, large gardens are more efficient than small ones.
- The space does not require windows or outside ventilation, but it is
- easier to set up a space if it has one or the other.
- Larger growing areas need adequate ventilation so that heat, oxygen, and
- moisture levels can be controlled. Greenhouses usually have vents and fans
- built in. Provisions for ventilation must be made for lamp-lit enclosed
- areas. Heat and moisture buildup can be extraordinary. During the winter
- in most areas, the heat is easily dissipated; however, the heat buildup is
- harder to deal with in hot weather. Adequate ventilation or air coolers are
- the answer.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - Part 5 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Preparing the Space"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- The space is the future home and environment of the plants. It should be
- cleaned of any residue or debris which might house insects, parasites or
- diseases. If it has been contaminated with plant pests it can be sprayed or
- wiped down with a 5% bleach solution which kills most organisms. The room
- must be well-venitalted when this operation is going on. The room will be
- subject to high humidity so any materials such as clothing which might be
- damaged by moisture are removed.
- Since the plants will be watered, and water may be spilled, the floors
- and any other areas that may be water damaged should be covered with
- linoleum or plastic. High grade 6 or 8 mil polyethylene drop cloths or
- vinyl tarps protect a floor well. The plastic should be sealed with tape so
- that no water seeps to the floor.
- The amount of light delivered to the plant rises dramatically when the
- space is enclosed by reflective material. Some good reflective materials
- are flat white paint, aluminum foil (the dull side so that the light is
- diffused), white cardboard, plywood painted white, white polyethylene,
- silvered mylar, gift wrap, white cloth, or silvered plastic such as
- Astrolon. Mterials can be taped or tacked onto the walls, or hung as
- curtains. All areas of the space should be covered with reflective
- material. The walls, ceiling and floors are all capable of reflecting light
- and should be covered with reflective material such as aluminum foil. It is
- easiest to run the material vertically rather than horizontally.
- Experienced growers find it convenient to use the wide, heavy-duty
- aluminum foil or insulating foil (sold in wide rolls) in areas which will
- not be disturbed and plastic or cloth curtains where the material will be
- moved.
- Windows can be covered with opaque material if a bright light emanating
- from the window would draw suspicion. If the window does not draw suspicion
- and allows bright light into the room, it should be covered with a
- translucent material such as rice paper, lace curtains, or aquarium crystal
- paint.
- Garages, metal buildings, or attics can be converted to lighthouses by
- replacing the roof with fiberglass greenhouse material such as Filon. These
- translucent panels permit almost all the light to pass through but diffuse
- it so that there is no visible image passing out while there is an even
- distribution of light coming in. A space with a translucent roof needs no
- artificial lighting in the summer and only supplemental lighting during the
- other seasons. Overhead light entering from askylight or large window is
- very helpful. Light is utilized best if it is diffused.
- Concrete and other cold floors should be covered with insulating material
- such as foam carpet lining, styrofoam sheeting, wood planks or wooden
- palettes so that the plant containers and the roots are kept from getting
- cold.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - Part 6 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Plant Size and Spacing"
-
- from
-
- Marijauna Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- Marijuana varieties differ not only in their growth rate, but also in
- their potential size. The grower also plays a role in determining the size
- of the plants because the plants can be induced to flower at any age or size
- just by regulating the number of hours of uninterrupted darkness that the
- plants receive.
- Growers have different ideas about how much space each plant needs. The
- closer the plants are spaced, the less room the individual plant has to
- grow. Some growers use only a few plants in a space, and they grow the
- plants in large containers. Other growers prefer to fill the space with
- smaller plants. Either method works, but a garden with smaller plants which
- fills the space mroe completely probably yields more in less time. The total
- vegetative growth in a room containing many small sized plants is greater
- than a room containing only a few plants. Since each plant is smaller, it
- needs less time to grow to its desired size. Remember that the gardener is
- interested in a crop of beautiful buds, not beautiful plants.
- The amount of space a plant requires depends on the height the plants are
- to grow. A plant growing 10 feet high is going to be wider than a 4 foot
- plant. The width of the plant also depends on cultivation practices.
- Plants which are pruned grow wider than unpruned plants. The different
- growth characteristics of the plants also affect the space required by each
- plant. In 1- or 2-light gardens, where the plants are to grow no higher
- than 6 feet, plants are given between 1 and 9 square feet of space. In a
- high greenhouse lit by natural light, where the plants grow 10-12 feet high,
- the plants may be given as much as 80 to 100 square feet.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 7 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Planting Mixes"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- One of the first books written on indoor growing suggested that the
- entire floor of a grow room be filled with soil. This method is effective
- but unfeasible for most cultivators. Still, the growers have a wide choice
- of growing mediums and techniques; they may choose between growing in soil
- or using a hydroponic method.
- Most growers prefer to cultivate their plants in containers filled with
- soil, commercial mixes, or their own recipe of soil, fertilizers, and soil
- conditioners. These mixes vary quite a bit in their content, nutrient
- values, texture, pH, and water-holding capacity.
- Potting soil is composed of topsoil, which is a natural outdoor composite
- high in nutrients. It is the top layer of soil, containing large amounts of
- organic material such as humus and compost as well as minerals and clays.
- Topsoil is usually lightened up so that it does not pack. This is done by
- using sand, vermiculite, perlite, peat moss and/or gravel.
- Potting soil tends to be very heavy, smell earthy and have a rich dark
- color. It can supply most of the nutrients that a plant needs for the first
- couple of months.
- Commercial potting mixes are composites manufactured from ingredients
- such as bark or wood fiber, composts, or soil conditioners such as
- vermiculite, perlite, and peat moss. They are designed to support growth of
- houseplants by holding adequate amounts of water and nutrients and releasing
- them slowly. Potting mixes tend to be low in nutrients and often require
- fertilization from the outset. Many of them may be considered hydroponic
- mixes because the nutrients are supplied by the gardener in a water solution
- on a regular basis.
- Texture of the potting mix is the most important consideration for
- containerized plants. The mixture should drain well and allow air to enter
- empty spaces so that the roots can breathe oxygen. Mixes which are too fine
- may become soggy or stick together, preventing the roots from obtaining the
- required oxygen. A soggy condition also promotes the growth of anaerobic
- bacteria which release acids that eventually harm the roots.
- A moist potting mix with good texture should form a clump if it is
- squeezed in a fist; then with a slight poke the clod should break up. If
- the clod stays together, soil conditioners are required to loosen it up.
- Vermiculite, perlite or pea-sized styrofoam chips will serve the purpose.
- Some growers prefer to make their own mixes. These can be made from soil,
- soil conditioners, and fertilizers.
- Plants grown in soil do not grow as quickly as those in hydroponic mixes.
- However, many growers prefer soil for aesthetic reasons. Good potting mixes
- can be made from topsoil fairly easy.
- Usually it is easier to buy topsoil than to use unpasteurized topsoil
- which contains weed seeds, insects and disease organisms. Outdoors, these
- organisms are kept in check, for the most part, by the forces of nature.
- Bringing them indoors, however, is like bringing them into an incubator,
- where many of their natural enemies are not around to take care of them.
- Soil can be sterilized using a 5% bleach solution poured through the medium
- or by being steamed for 20 minutes. Probably the easiest way to sterilize
- soil is to use a microwave. It is heated until it is steaming, about 5
- minutes for a gallon or more.
- Potting soils and potting mixes vary tremendously in composition, pH and
- fertility. Most mixes contain only small amounts of soil. If a package is
- marked "potting soil", it is usually made mostly from topsoil.
- If the soil clumps up it should be loosened using sand, perlite or
- styrofoam. One part amendment is used to 2-3 parts soil. Additives listen
- in Chart 7-2 may also be added. Here is a partial list of soil
- conditioners:
-
- Foam
-
- Foam rubber can be used in place of styrofoam. Although it holds water
- trapped between its open cells it also holds air. About 1.5 parts of foam
- rubber for every part of styrofoam is used. Pea-size pieces or smaller
- should be used.
-
- Gravel
-
- Gravel is often used as a sole medium in hydroponic systems because it is
- easy to clean, never wears out, does not "lock up" nutrients, and is
- inexpensive. It is also a good mix ingredient because it creates large
- spaces for airpockets and gives the mix weight. Some gravel contains
- limestone (see "Sand"). This material should not be used.
-
- Lava
-
- Lava is a preferred medium on its own or as a part of a mix. It is
- porous and holds water both on its surface and in the irregular spaces along
- its irregular shape. Lava is an ideal medium by itself but is sometimes
- considered a little too dry. To give it moremoisture-holding ability, about
- one part of wet vermiculite ismixed with 3 to 6 parts lava. The vermiculite
- will break up and coat the lava, creating a mdeium with excellent
- water-holding abilities and plenty of air spaces. If the mix is watered
- from the top, the vermiculite will wash down eventually, but if it is
- watered from the bottom it will remain.
-
- Perlite
-
- Perlite is an expanded (puffed) volcanic glass. It is lightweight with
- many peaks and valleys on its surface, where it traps particles of water.
- However, it does not absorb water into its structure. It does not break
- down easily and is hard to the touch. Perlite comes in several grades with
- the coarser grade being better for larger containers. perlite is very dusty
- when dry. To eliminate dust, the material is watered to saturation with a
- watering can or hose before it is removed from the bag. Use of masks and
- respirators is important.
-
- Rockwool
-
- Rockwool is made from stone which has been heated then extruded into
- think strands which are something like glass wool. It absorbs water like a
- wick. It usually comes in blocks or rolls. It can be used in all systems
- but is usually used in conjunction with drop emitters. Growers report
- phenomenal growth rates using rockwool. It is also very convenient to use.
- The blocks are placed in position or it is rolled out. Then seeds or
- transplants are placed on the material.
-
- Sand
-
- Sand is a heavy material which is often added to a mixture to increase
- its weight so that the plant is held more firmly. It promotes drainage and
- keeps the mix from caking. Sand comes in several grades too, but all of
- them seem to work well. The best sand to use is composed of quartz. Sand
- is often composed of limestone; the limestone/sand raised pH, causing
- micronutrients to precipitate, making them unavailable to the plants. It is
- best not to use it.
- Limestone-containing sand can be "cured" by soaking in a solution of
- water and superphosphate fertilizer which binds with the surface of the lime
- molecule in the sand, making the molecule temporarily inert. One pound of
- superphosphate is used to 5 gallons of water. It dissolves best in hot
- water. The sand should sit in this for 6-12 hours and then be rinsed.
- Superphosphate can be purchased at most nurseries.
- Horticultural sand is composed of inert materials and needs no curing.
- Sand must be made free of salt if it came from a salt-water area.
-
- Sphagnum Moss
-
- Sphagnum or peat moss is gathered from bogs in the midwest. It absorbs
- many times its own weight in water and acts as a buffer for nutrients.
- Buffers absorb the nutrients and hold large amounts in their chemical
- structure. The moss releases them gradually as they are used by the plant.
- If too much nutrient is supplied, the moss will act on it and hold it,
- preventing toxic buildups in the water solution. Moss tends to be acidic so
- no more than 20% of the planting mix should be composed of it.
-
- Styrofoam Pellets
-
- Styrofoam is a hydrophobic material (it repels water) and is an excellent
- soil mix ingredient. It allows air spaces to form in the mix and keeps the
- materials from clumping, since it does not bond with other materials or with
- itself. One problem is that it is lighter than water and tends to migrate
- to the top of the mix. Styrofoam is easily used to adjust the water-holding
- capacity of a mix. Mixes which are soggy or which hold too much water can
- be "dried" with the addition of styrofoam. Styrofoam balls or chips no
- larger than a pea should be used in fine-textured mixtures. Larger
- styrofoam pieces can be used in coarse mixes.
-
- Vermiculite
-
- Vermiculite is porcessed puffed mica. It is very lightweight but holds
- large quantities of water in its structure. Vermiculite is available in
- several size pieces. The large size seems to permit more aeration.
- Vermiculite breaks down into smaller particles over a period of time.
- Vermiculite is sold in several grades based on the size of the particles.
- The fine grades are best suited to small containers. In large containers,
- fine particles tend to pack too tightly, not leaving enough space for air.
- Coarser grades should be used in larger containers. Vermiculite is dusty
- when dry, so it should be wet down before it is used.
-
- Mediums used in smaller containers should be able to absorb more water
- than mediums in larger containers. For instance, seedlings started in 1 to
- 2 inch containers can be planted in plain vermiculite or soil. Containers
- up to about one gallon can be filled with a vermiculite-perlite or
- soil-perlite mix. Containers larger than that need a mix modified so that
- it does not hold as much water and does not become soggy. The addition of
- sand, gravel, or styrofoam accomplishes this very easily.
- Here are lists of different mediums suitable for planting: Below is a
- list of the moist mixtures, suitable for the wick system, the reservoir
- system and drop emitters which are covered in part 9.
-
- Chart 7-1-A: Moist Planting Mixes
-
- 1) 4 parts topsoil, 1 part vermiculite, 1 part perlite. Moist, contains
- medium-high amounts of nutrients. Best for wick and hand-watering.
- 2) 3 parts topsoil, 1 part peat moss, 1 part vermiculite, 1 part perlite,
- 1 part styrofoam. Moist but airy. Medium nutrients. Best for wick
- and hand-watering.
- 3) 3 parts vermiculite, 3 parts perlite, 1 part sand, 2 parts pea-sized
- gravel. Moist and airy but has some weight. Good for all systems,
- drains well.
- 4) 5 parts vermiculite, 5 parts perlite. Standard mix, moist. Excellent
- for wick and drop emitters systems though it works well for all
- systems.
- 5) 3 parts vermiculite, 1 part perlite, 1 part styrofoam. Medium dry
- mix, excellent for all systems.
- 6) 2 parts vermiculite, 1 part perlite, 1 part styrofoam, 1 part peat
- moss. Moist mix.
- 7) 2 parts vermiculite, 2 parts perlite, 3 parts styrofoam, 1 part
- sphagnum moss, 1 part compost. Medium moisture, small amounts of slow
- releasing nutrients, good for all systems.
- 8) 2 parts topsoil, 2 parts compost, 1 part sand, 1 part perlite.
- Medium-moist, high in slow-release of organic nutrients, good for wick
- and drip systems, as well as hand watering.
- 9) 2 parts compost, 1 part perlite, 1 part sand, 1 part lava. Drier mix,
- high in slow-release of nutrients, drains well, good for all systems.
- 10) 1 part topsoil, 1 part compost, 2 parts sand, 1 part lava. Dry mix,
- high in nutrients, good for all systems.
- 11) 3 parts compost, 3 parts sand, 2 parts perlite, 1 part peat moss, 2
- parts vermiculite. Moist, mid-range nutrients, good for wick systems.
- 12) 2 parts compost, 2 parts sand, 1 part styrofoam. Drier, high
- nutrients, good for all systems.
- 13) 5 parts lava, 1 part vermiculite. Drier, airy, good for all systems.
-
- Here are some drier mediums suitable for flood systems as well as drip
- emitters (hydroponic systems covered in part 9).
-
- Chart 7-1-B: Flood System/Drip Emitter Mixes
-
- 1) Lava
-
- 2) Pea sized gravel
-
- 3) Sand
-
- 4) Mixes of any or all of the above.
-
- Manure and other slow-releasing natural fertilizers are often added to
- the planting mix. With these additives, the grower needs to use ferilizers
- only supplementally. Some of the organic amendments are listed in the
- following chart. Organic amendments can be mixed but should not be used in
- amounts larger than those recommended because too much nutrient can cause
- toxicity.
- Some growers add time-release fertilizers to the mix. These are
- formulated to release nutrients over a specified period of time, usually 3,
- 4, 6 or 8 months. The actual rate of release is regulated in part by
- temperature, and since house temperatures are usually higher than outdoor
- soil temperatures, the fertilizers used indoors release over a shorter
- period of time than is noted on the label.
- Gardeners find that they must supplement the time-release fertilizer
- formulas with soluble fertilizers during the growing season. Growers can
- circumvent this problem by using time-release fertilizer suggested for a
- longer period of time than the plant cycle. For instance, a 9 month
- time-release fertilizer can be used in a 6 month garden. Remember that more
- fertilizer is releasing faster, so that a larger amount of nutrients will be
- available than was intended. These mixes are used sparingly.
- About one tablespoon of dolomite limestone should be added for each
- gallon of planting mix, or a half cup per cubic foot of mix. This supplies
- the calcium along with mangesium, both of which the plants require. If
- dolomite is unavailable, then hydrated lime or any agricultural lime can be
- used.
-
- Chart 7-2: Organic Amendments
-
-
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Amendment | N | P | K | 1 Part : X Parts Mix |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Cow Manure | 1.5 | .85 | 1.75 | Excellent condition, breaks down |
- | | | | | over the growing season. 1:10 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Chicken Manure | 3 | 1.5 | .85 | Fast acting. 1:20 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Blood Meal | 15 | 1.3 | .7 | N quickly available. 1:100 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Dried Blood | 13 | 3 | 0 | Very soluble. 1:100 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Worm Castings | 3 | 1 | .5 | Releases N gradually. 1:15 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Guano | 2-8 | 2-5 | .5-3 | Varies alot, moderately soluble. |
- | | | | | For guano containing 2% nitrogen, |
- | | | | | 1:15. For 8% nitrogen, 1:40 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Cottonseed Meal | 6 | 2.5 | 1.5 | Releases N gradually. 1:30. |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Greensand | 0 | 1.5 | 5 | High in micronutrients. Nutrients |
- | | | | | available over the season. 1:30 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Feathers | 15 | ? | ? | Breaks down slowly. 1:75 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
- | Hair | 17 | ? | ? | Breaks down slowly. 1:75 |
- +-----------------+-----+-----+------+-------------------------------------+
-
- N = Nitrogen * P = Phosphorous * K = Potassium
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 8 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Hydroponics vs. Soil Gardening"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Plants growing in the wild outdoors obtain their nutrients from the
- breakdown of complex organic chemicals into simpler water-soluble forms.
- The roots catch the chemicals using a combination of electrical charges and
- chemical manipulation. The ecosystem is generally self-supporting. For
- instance, in some tropical areas most of the nutrients are actually held by
- living plants. As soon as the vegetation dies, bacteria and other microlife
- feast and render the nutrients water-soluble. They are absorbed into the
- soil and are almost immediately taken up by higher living plants.
- Farmers remove some of the nutrients from the soil when they harvest
- their crops. In order to replace those nutrients they add fertilizers and
- other soil additives. [pH : perhaps shake would be good fertilizer for
- one's next crop]
- Gardeners growing plants in containers have a closed ecology system.
- Once the plants use the nutrients in the medium, their growth and health is
- curtailed until more nutrients become available to them. It is up to the
- grower to supply the nutrients required by the plants. The addition of
- organic matter such as compost or manure to the medium allows the plant to
- obtain nutrients for a while without the use of water-soluble fertilizers.
- However, once these nutrients are used up, growers usually add water-soluble
- nutrients when they water. Without realizing it, they are gardening
- hydroponically. Hydroponics is the art of growing plants, usually without
- soil, using water-soluble fertilizers as the main or sole source of
- nutrients. The plants are grown in a non-nutritive medium such as gravel or
- sand or in lightweight materials such as perlite, vermiculite or styrofoam.
- The advantages of a hydroponic system over conventional horticultural
- methods are numerous: dry dpots, root drowning and soggy conditions do not
- occur. Nutrient and pH problems are largely eliminated since the grower
- maintains tight control over their concentration; there is little chance of
- "lockup" which occurs when the nutrients are fixed in the soil and
- unavailable to the plant; plants can be grown more conveniently in small
- containers; and owing to the fact that there is no messing around with soil,
- the whole operation is easier, cleaner, and much less bothersome than when
- using conventional growing techniques.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 9 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Hydroponic Systems"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Most hydroponic systems fall into one of two broad categories: passive or
- active. Passive systems such as reservoir or wick setups depend on the
- molecular action inherent in the wick or medium to make water available to
- the plant. Active systems which include the flood, recirculating drop and
- aerated water systems, use a pump to send nourishment to the plants.
- Most commercially made "hobby" hydroponic systems designed for general
- use are shallow and wide, so that an intensive garden with a variety of
- plants can be grown. But most marijuana growers prefer to grow each plant
- in an individual container.
-
- PASSIVE HYDROPONIC SYSTEMS
-
- The Wick System
-
- The wick system is inexpensive, easy to set up and easy to maintain. The
- principle behind this type of passive system is that a length of 3/8 to 5/8
- inch thick braided nylon rope, used as a wick, will draw water up to the
- medium and keep it moist. The container, which can be an ordinary nursery
- pot, holds a rooting medium and has wicks runing along the bottom, drooping
- through the holes at the bottom, reaching down into a reservoir. Keeping
- the holes in the container small makes it difficult for roots to pentrate to
- the reservoir. The amount of water delivered to the medium can be increased
- by increasing the number, length, or diameter of the wicks in contact with
- the medium.
- A 1 gallon container needs only a single wick, a three gallon container
- should have two wicks, a five gallon container, three wicks. The wick
- system is self regulating; the amount of water delivered depnds on the
- amount lost through evaporation or transpiration.
- Each medium has a maximum saturation level. Beyond that point, an
- increase in the number of wicks will not increase the moisture level. A
- 1-1-1 combination of vermiculite, perlite, and styrofoam is a convenient
- medium because the components are lightweight and readily available. Some
- commercial units are supplied with coarse vermiculite. To increase weight
- so that the plant will not tip the container over when it gets large, some
- of the perlite in the recipe can be replaced with sand. The bottom inch or
- two of the container should be filled only with vermiculite, which is very
- absorbent, so that the wicks have a good medium for moisture transfer.
- Wick systems are easy to construct. The wick should extend 5 inches or
- more down from the container. Two bricks, blocks of wood, or styrofoam are
- placed on the bottom of a deep tray (a plastic tray or oil drip pan will do
- fine.) Then the container is placed on the blocks so that the wicks are
- touching the bottom of the tray. The tray is filled with a nutrient/water
- solution. Water is replaced in the tray as it evaporates or is absorbed by
- the medium through the wick.
- A variation of this system can be constructed using an additional outer
- container rather than a tray. With this method less water is lost due to
- evaporation.
- To make sure that the containers git together and come apart easily,
- bricks or wood blocks are placed in the bottom of the outer container. The
- container is filled with the nutrient/water solution until the water comes
- to just below the bottom of the inner container.
- Automating this system is simple to do. Each of the tray or bottom
- containers is connected by tubing to a bucket containing a float valve such
- as found in toilets. The valve is adjusted so that it shuts off when the
- water reaches a height about 1/2 inch below the bottom of the growing
- containers. The bucket with the float valve is connected to a large
- reservoir such as a plastic garbage can or 55 gallon drum. Holes can be
- drilled in the containers to accomodate the tubing required, or the tubes
- can be inserted from the top of the containers or trays. The tubes should
- be secured or weighted down so that they do not slip out and cause floods.
- The automated wick system works as a siphon. To get it started, the
- valve container is primed and raised above the level of the individual
- trays. Water flows from the valve to the plant trays as a result of
- gravity. Once the containers have filled and displaced air from the tubes,
- the water is automatically siphoned and the valve container can be lowers.
- Each container receives water as it needs it.
- A simpler system can be devised by using a plastic kiddie pool and some
- 4x4's or a woodem pallet. Wood is placed in the pool so that the pots sit
- firmly on the board; the pool is then filled with water up to the bottom of
- the pots. The wicks move the water to the pots.
- Wick systems and automated wick systems are available from several
- manufacturers. Because they require no moving parts, they are generally
- reliable although much more expensive than homemande ones, which are very
- simple to make.
- Wick system units can be filled with any of the mixes found in Chart
- 7-1-A.
-
- The Reservoir System
-
- The reservoir system is even less complex than the wick system. For this
- setup all a grower needs to do is fill the bottom 2 or 3 inches of a 12 inch
- deep container with a coarse, porous, inert medium such as lava, ceramic
- beads or chopped unglazed pottery. The remaining portion is filled with one
- of the mixes containing styrofoam. The container is placed in a tray, and
- sits directly in a nutrient-water solution 2-3 inches deep. The system is
- automated by placing the containers in a trough or large tray. Kiddie pools
- can also be used. The water is not replaced until the holding tray dies.
- Passive systems should be watered from the top down once a month so that
- any buildup of nutrient salts caused by evaporation gets washed back to the
- bottom.
-
- ACTIVE HYDROPONIC SYSTEMS
-
- Active systems move the water using mechanical devices in order to
- deliver it to the plants. There are many variations on active systems but
- most of them fall into one of three categories: flood systems, drip
- systems, or nutrient film systems.
-
- The Flood System
-
- The flood system is the type of unit that most people think of when
- hydroponics is mentioned. The system usually has a reservoir which
- periodically empties to flood the container or tub holding the medium. The
- medium holds enough moisture between irrigations to meet the needs of the
- plant. Older commercial greenhouses using this method often held long
- troughs or beds of gravel. Today, flood systems are designed using
- individual containers. Each container is attached to the reservoir using
- tubing.
- A simple flood system can be constructed using a container with a tube
- attached at the bottom of a plastic container [pH: that which the plant
- is placed in] and a jug. The tube should reach down to the jug, which
- should be placed below the bottom of the growing container. To water, the
- tube is held above the container so that it doesn't drop. The water is
- poured from the jug into the container. Next, the tube is placed in the jug
- and put back into position, below the growing container. The water will
- drain back into the jug. Of course, not as much will drain back in as was
- poured out. Some of the water was retained in the growing unit.
- Automating this unit is not difficult. A two-holed stopper is placed in
- the jug. A tube from the growing unit should reach the bottom of the
- reservoir container. Another tube should be attached to the other stopper
- hole and then to a small aquarium-type air pump which is regulated by a
- timer. When the pump turns on, it pushes air into the jug, forcing the
- water into the container. When the pump goes off, the water is forced back
- into the jug by gravity. Several growing units can be hooked up to a large
- central reservoir and pump to make a large system. The water loss can
- automatically be replaced using a float valve, similar to the ones used to
- regulate water in a toilet. Some growers place a second tube near the top
- of the container which they use as an overflow drain.
- Another system uses a reservoir above the growing container level. A
- water timing valve or solenoid valve keeps the water in the reservoir most
- of the time. When the valve opens, the water fills the growing containers
- as well as a central chamber which are both at the same height. The growing
- chambers and the central chamber are attached to each other. The water
- level is regulated by a float valve and a sump pump. When the water level
- reaches a certain height, near the top of the pots, the sump pump
- automatically turns on and the water is pumped back up to the reservoir.
- One grower used a kiddie pool, timer valve, flower pots, a raised
- reservoir and a sump pump. He placed the containers in the kiddie pool
- along with the sump pump and a float valve. When the timer valve opened,
- the water rushed from the tank to the kiddie pool, flooding the containers.
- The pump turned on when the water was two inches from the top of the
- containers and emptied the pool. Only when the valve reopened did the
- plants receive more water.
- With this system, growers have a choice of mediums, including sand,
- gravel, lava, foam or chopped-up rubber. Vermiculite, perlite, and
- styrofoam are too light to use. The styrofoam and perlite float, and the
- vermiculite becomes too soggy.
- The plants' water needs to increase during the lighted part of the daily
- cycle, so the best time to water is as the light cycle begins. If the
- medium does not hold enough moisture between waterings, the frequency of
- waterings is increased.
- There are a number of companies which manufacture flood systems. Most of
- the commercially made ones work well, but they tend to be on the expensive
- side. They are convenient, though.
-
- The Drip System
-
- Years ago, the most sophisticated commercial greenhouses used drip
- emitter systems which were considered exotic and sophisticated engineering
- feats. These days, gardeners can go to any well-equipped nursery and find
- all of the materials necessary to design and build the most sophisticated
- drop systems. These units consist of tubing and emitters which regulate the
- amount of water delivered to each individual container. Several types of
- systems can be designed using these devices.
- The easiest system to make is a non-return drain unit. The plants are
- watered periodically using a diluted nutrient solution. Excess water drains
- from the containers and out of the system. This system is only practical
- when there is a drain in the growing area. If each container has a growing
- tray to catch excess water and the water control valve is adjusted closely,
- any excess water can be held in the tray and eventually used by the plant or
- evaporated. Once a gardener gets the hang of it, matching the amount of
- water delivered to the amount needed is easy to do.
- One grower developed a drip emitter system which re-uses water by
- building a wooden frame using 2x4's and covering it with corrugated plastic
- sheeting. She designed it so that there was a slight slope. The containers
- were placed on the corrugated plastic, so the water drained along the
- corrugations into a rain drainage trough, which drained into a 2 or 3 gallon
- holding tank. The water was pumped from the holding taink back to the
- reservoir. The water was released from the reservoir using a timer valve.
-
- Aerated Water
-
- The aerated water system is probably the most complex of the hydroponic
- systems because it allows for the least margin of error. It should only be
- used by growers with previous hydroponic experience. The idea of the system
- is that the plant can grow in water as long as the roots receive adequate
- amounts of oxygen. To provide the oxygen, an air pump is used to oxygenate
- the water through bubbling and also by increasing the circulation of the
- water so that there is more contact with air. The plants can be grown in
- individual containers, each with its own bubbler or in a single flooded unit
- in which containers are placed. One grower used a vinyl covered tank he
- constructed. He placed individual containers that he made into the tank.
- His containers were made of heavy-duty nylon mesh used by beermakers for
- soaking hops. This did not prevent water from circulating around the roots.
- Aerated water systems are easy to build. A small aquarium air pump
- supplies all the water that is required. An aerator should be connected to
- the end and a clear channel made in the container for the air. The air
- channel allows the air to circulate and not disturb the roots. Gravel,
- lava, or ceramic is used.
-
- Nutrient Film Technique
-
- The nutrient film technique is so named because the system creates a film
- of water that is constantly moving around the roots. This technique is used
- in many commercial greenhouses to cultivate fast growing vegetables such as
- lettuce without any medium. The plants are supported by collars which hold
- them in place. This method is unfeasible for marijuana growers. However,
- it can be modified a bit to create an easy-to-care-for garden. Nursery
- suppliers sell water mats, which disperse water from a soaker hose to a
- nylon mat. The plants grow in the bottomless containers which sit on the
- mat. The medium absorbs water directly from the mat. In order to hold the
- medium in place, it is placed in a nylon net bag in the container.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 10 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Growing in the Ground"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Some growers have the opportunity to grow plants directly in the ground.
- Many greenhouses are built directly over the earth. Growing directly in the
- soil has many advantages over container growing. A considerable amount of
- labor may be eliminated because there is no need to prepare labor-intensive
- containers with expensive medium. Another advantage is that the plants'
- needs are met more easily.
- Before using any greenhouse soil, it is necessary to test it. The pH and
- fertility of soils vary so much that there are few generalizations that can
- be made about them.
- The most important quality of any soil is its texture. Soils which drain
- well usually are composed of particles of varying size. This creates paths
- for water to flow and also allows airs pockets to remain even when the soil
- is saturated.
- Soils composed of very fine particles, such as mucks and clay, do not
- drain well. Few air particles are trapped in these soils when they are
- saturated. When this happens, the roots are unable to obtain oxygen and
- they weaken when they are attacked by anaerobic bacteria. These soils
- should be adjusted with sand and organic matter which help give the medium
- some porosity. Materials suitable for this include sand, compost, composted
- manure, as well as perlite, lava, gravel, sphagnum moss, styrofoam particles
- and foam particles.
- Low lying areas may have a very high water table so that the soils remain
- saturated most of the time. One way to deal with this problem is to create
- a series of mounds or raised beds so that the roots are in ground at higher
- level than the floor level.
- Once soil nutrient values are determined, adjustments can be made in the
- soil's fertility. For marijuana, the soil should test high in total
- Nitrogen, and the medium should test high in Phosphorous and Potassium.
- This is covered in subsequent files.
- Growers use several methods to prepare the soil. Some prefer to till the
- whole area using either a fork, a roto-tiller or a small tractor and plow.
- The marijuana plant grows both vertical and horizontal roots. The
- horizontal roots grow from the surface to a depth of 9-18 inches depending
- on the soil's moisture. They grow closer to the surface of moist soils.
- The vertical root can stretch down several feet in search of water. In
- moist soils, the vertical roots may be short, even stunted.
- Soil with loose texture, sandy soils, and soils high in organic matter
- may have adequate aeration, porosity, and space for roots and may not have
- to be tilled at all. Most soils should be dug to a depth of 6-9 inches.
- The tighter the soil's texture, the deeper it should be filled.
- If the soil is compacted, it is dug to a depth of two feet. This can be
- done by plowing and moving the soil in alternate rows and then plowing the
- newly uncovered soil. Soil texture adjustors such as gypsum are added to
- the bottom layer of the soil as well as the top layer, but soil amendments
- such as fertilizers or compst are added only to the top layer, where most of
- the plant's roots are. Then the soil is moved back into the troughs and the
- alternate rows are prepared the same way.
- A variation of this technique is the raised bed. First, the whole area
- is turned, and then aisles are constructed by digging out the pathways and
- adding the material to the beds. With the addition of organic soil
- amendments, the total depth of prepared soil may stretch down 18 inches.
- Some growers use planting holes rather than tilling the soil. A hole
- ranging between 1 and 3 feet wide and 1.5 and 3 feet deep is dug at each
- space where there is to be a plant. The digging can be facilitated using a
- post hole digger, electric shovel, or even a small backhoe or power hole
- digger. Once the hole is dug the soil is adjusted with amendments or even
- replaced with a mix.
- No matter how the soil is prepared, the groundwater level and the
- permeability of the lower layers is of utmost importance. Areas with high
- water tables, or underlying clay or hardpan will not drain well. In either
- case the harden should be grown in raised beds which allow drainage through
- the aisles and out of the growing area, rather than relying on downward
- movement through soil layers.
- Soils in used greenhouses may be quite imbalanced even if the plants were
- growing in containers. The soil may have a buildup of mutrient salts,
- either from runoff or direct application, and pesticides and herbicides may
- be present. In soils with high water tables, the nutrients and chemicals
- have nowhere to go, so they dissolve and spread out horizontally as well as
- vertically, contaminating the soil in surrounding areas.
- Excess salts can be flushed from the soil by flooding the area with water
- and letting it drain to the water table. In areas with high water tables,
- flushing is much more difficult. Trenches are dug around the perimeter of
- the garden which is then flooded with nutrient-free water. As the water
- drains into the trenches, it is removed with a pump and transported to
- another location.
- Pesticides and herbicides may be much mroe difficult to remove. Soils
- contaminated with significant amounts of residues may be unsuitable for use
- with material to be ingested or inhaled. Instead, the garden should be
- grown in containers using nonindigenous materials.
- Usually plants are sexed before they are planted into the ground. If the
- soil showed adequate nutrient values no fertilizer or side dressing will be
- required for several months.
- Several growers have used ingenious techniqures to provide their gardens
- with earthy environments. One grower in Oregon chopped through the concrete
- floor of his garage to make planting holes. The concrete had been poured
- over sub-soil so he dug out the holes and replaced the sub-soil with a
- mixture of composted manure, vermiculite, perlite, worm castings, and other
- organic ingredients. He has been using the holes for several years. After
- several crops, he redigs the holes and adds new ingredients to the mix.
- A grower in Philadelphia lived in a house with a backyard which was
- cemented over. He constructed a raised bed over the concrete using railroad
- ties and filled it with a rich topsoil and composted manure mixture, then
- built his greenhouse over that. The growing bed is about 15 inches deep and
- the grower reports incredible growth rates.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 11 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Lighting and Lights"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Green plants use light for several purposes. The most amazing thing that
- they can do with it is to use the energy contained in light to make sugar
- from water and carbon dioxide. This process is called photosynthesis and it
- provides the basic building block for most life on Earth. Plants convert
- the sugars they make into starches and then into complex molecules composed
- of starches, such as cellulose. Amino acids, the building blocks of all
- proteins, are formed with the addition of nitrogen atoms.
- Plants also use ligh to regulate their other life processes. As we
- mentioned earlier, marijuana regulates its flowering based on the number of
- hours of uniterrupted darkness. (See part 25, Flowering)
- Sunlight is seen as white light, but is composed of a broadf band of
- colors which cover the optic spectrum. Plants use red and blue light most
- efficiently for photosynthesis and to regulate other processes. However,
- they do use other light colors as well for photosynthesis. In fact, they
- use every color except green, which they reflect back. (That is why plants
- appear green; they absorb all the other spectrums except green.) In
- controlled experiements, plants respond more to the toal amount of light
- received than to the spectrums in which it was delivered.
- The best source of light is the sun. It requires no expense, no
- electricity, and does not draw suspicion. It is brighter than artifical
- light and is self regulating. Gardeners can use the sun as a primary source
- of light if they have a large window, skylight, translucent roof, enclosed
- patio, roof garden, or greenhouse. These gardens may require some
- supplemental lightning, especially if the light enters from a small area
- such as a skylight, in order to fill a large area.
- It is hard to say just how much supplemental light a garden needs.
- Bright spaces which are lit from unobstructed overhead light such as a
- greenhouse or a large southern window need no light during the summer but
- may need artificial light during the winter to supplement the weak sunlight
- or overcast conditions. Spaces receiving indirect sunlight during the
- summer may need some supplemental lighting.
- Light requirements vary by variety. During the growth cycle, most
- varieties will do well with 1000-1500 lumens per square foot although the
- plants can usemore lumens, up to 3000, efficiently. Equatorial varieties
- may develop long internodes (spaces on the stem between the leaves) when
- grown under less that bright conditions. During flowering, indica varieties
- can mature well on 2000 lumens. Equatorial varieties require 2500-5000
- lumens. Indica-sativa F1 (first generation) hybrids usually do well on
- 2500-3000 lumens.
- Some light meters have a foot-candle readout. Thirty-five millimeter
- cameras that have built-in light meters can also be used. In either case, a
- sheet of white paper is placed at the point to be measured so it reflects
- the light most brilliantly. Then the meter is focused entirely on the
- paper.
- The camera is set for ASA 100 film and the shutter is set for 1/60
- second. A 50 mm or "normal" lens is used. Using the manual mode, the
- camera is adjusted to the correct f-stop. The conversion chart, 10-1, shows
- the amount of light hitting the paper.
- Most growers, for one reason or another, are not able to use natural
- light to grow marijuana. Instead, they use artificial lights to provide the
- light energy which plants require to photosynthesize, regulate their
- metabolism, and ultimately to grow. There are a number of sources of
- artificial lighting. Cultivators rarely use incandescent or quartz halogen
- lights. They convert only about 10% of the energy they use to light and are
- considered inefficient.
-
- Chart 10-1: Footcandles
-
- +----------------------+----------------------+
- | 1/60 Second, ASA 100 | 1/125 Second ASA 100 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | F-Stop | Footcandles | F-Stop | Footcandles |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | f.4 | 64 | f.4 | 128 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | f.5.6 | 125 | f.5.6 | 250 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | f.8 | 250 | f.8 | 500 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | f.11 | 500 | f.11 | 1000 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | f.16 | 1000 | f.16 | 2000 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
- | f.22 | 2000 | f.22 | 4000 |
- +--------+-------------+--------+-------------+
-
- On some cameras it is easier to adjust the shutter speed, keeping the f.stop
- set at f.4 (at ASA 100):
-
- +----------------+-------------+
- | Shutter Speed | Footcandles |
- +----------------+-------------+
- | 1/60 | 64 |
- +----------------+-------------+
- | 1/125 | 125 |
- +----------------+-------------+
- | 1/250 | 250 |
- +----------------+-------------+
- | 1/500 | 500 |
- +----------------+-------------+
- | 1/1000 | 1000 |
- +----------------+-------------+
- | 1/2000 | 2000 |
- +----------------+-------------+
-
-
- FLUORESCENT TUBES
-
- Growers have used flurorescent tubes to provide light for many years.
- They are inexpensive, are easy to set up, and are very effective. Plants
- grow and bud well under them. They are two to three times as efficient as
- incandescents. Until recently, fluorescents came mostly in straight lengths
- of 2, 4, 6, or 8 feet, which were placed in standard reflectors. Now there
- are many more options for the fluorescent user. One of the most convenient
- fixtures to use is the screw-in converter for use in incandescent sockets,
- which come with 8 or 12 inch diameter circular fluorescent tubes. A
- U-shaped 9 inch screw-in fluorecent is also available. Another convenient
- fixture is the "light wand", which is a 4 foot, very portable tube. It is
- not saddled with a cumbersome reflector.
- Fluorescents come in various spectrums as determined by the type of
- phosphor with which the surface of the tube is coated. Each phosphor emits
- a different set of colors. Each tube has a spectrum identification such as
- "warm white", "cool white", "daylight", or "deluxe cool white" to name a
- few. This signifies the kind of light the tube produces. For best results,
- growers use a mixture of tubes which have various shades of white light.
- Once company manufactures a fluorescent tube which is supposed to reproduce
- the sun's spectrum. It is called the Vita-Lite and works well. it comes in
- a more efficient version, the "Power Twist", which uses the same amount of
- electricity but emits more light because it has a larger surface area.
- "Gro-Tubes" do not work as well as regular fluorescents even though they
- produce light mainly in the red and blue spectrums. They produce a lot less
- light than the other tubes.
- To maintain a fast growing garden, a minimum of 20 watts of fluorescent
- light per square foot is required. As long as the plants' other needs are
- met, the more light that the plants receive, the faster and bushier they
- will grow. The plants' buds will also be heavier and more developed.
- Standard straight-tubed fluorescent lamps use 8-10 watts per linear foot.
- To light a garden, 2 tubes are required for each foot of width. The 8 inch
- diameter circular tubes use 22 watts, the 12 inch diameter use 32 watts.
- Using straight tubes, it is possible to fit no more than 4 tubes in each
- foot of width because of the size of the tubes. A unit using a combination
- of 8 and 12 inch circular tubes has an input of 54 watts per square foot.
- Some companies manufacture energy-saving electronic ballasts designed for
- use with special fluorescent tubes. These units use 39% less electricity
- and emit 91% of the light of standard tubes. For instance, an Optimizer
- warm light white 4 foot tube uses 28 watts and emits 2475 lumens.
- Both standard and VHO ballasts manufactured before 1980 are not
- recommended. They were insulated using carcinogenic PCB's and they are a
- danger to your health should they leak.
- The shape of the fluorescent reflector used determines, to a great
- extent, how much light the plants receive. Fluorescent tubes emit light
- from their entire surface so that some of the light is directed at the
- reflector surfaces. Many fixtures place the tubes very close to each other
- so that only about 40% of the light is actually transmitted out of the unit.
- The rest of it is trapped between the tubes or between the tubes and the
- reflector. This light may as well not be emitted since it is doing no good.
- A better reflector can be constructed using a wooden frame. Place the
- tube holders at equal distances from each other at least 4 inches apart.
- This leaves enough space to construct small mini-reflectors which are angled
- to reflect the light downward and to seperate the light from the different
- tubes so that it is not lost in crosscurrents. These mini-reflectors can be
- made from cardboard or plywood painted white. The units should be no longer
- than 2.5 feet wide so that they can be manipulated easily. Larger units are
- hard to move up and down and they make access to the garden difficult,
- especially when the plants are small, and there is not much vertical space.
- The frame of the reflector should be covered with reflective material such
- as aluminum foil so that all of the light is directed to the garden.
- Fluorescent lights should be placed about 2-4 inches from the tops of the
- plants.
-
- [pH:in Ed's diagram, the reflectors between the lights have a shape
- similar to this:
-
- * *
- * *
- * *
- * *
- * *
- * *
- **
-
- Sort of a curving V, if you see what I mean.]
-
- Growers sometimes use fluorescent lights in innovative ways to supplement
- the main source of the light. Lights are sometimes placed along the sides
- of the garden or in the midst of it. One grower used light wands which he
- hung vertically in the midst of the garden. This unit provided light to the
- lower parts of the plant which are often shaded. Another grower hung a tube
- horizontally at plant level between each row. He used no reflector because
- the tube shined on the plants from ever angle. Lights can be hung at
- diagonal angles to match the different plants' heights.
-
- VERY HIGH OUTPUT (VHO) FLUORESCENTS
-
- Standard fluorescents use about 10 watts per linear foot - a 4 foot
- fluorescent uses 40 watts, an 8 footer 72 watts. VHO tubes use about three
- times the electricity that standard tubes use, or about 215 watts for an 8
- foot tube, and they emit about 2.5 times the light. While they are not
- quite as efficient as a standard tube, they are often more convenient to
- use. Two tubes per foot produce the equivalent electricity of 5 standard
- tubes. [pH:That's what he says. Why one would want the tubes to produce
- electricity instead of light I will never know.] Only one tube per foot is
- needed and two tubes emit a very bright light. The banks of tubes are
- eliminated.
- VHO tubes come in the same spectrums as standards. They require
- different ballasts than standards and are available at commercial lighting
- companies.
-
- METAL HALIDE LAMPS
-
- Metal halide lamps are probably the most popular lamp used for growing.
- These are the same type of lamp that are used outdoors as streetlamps or to
- illuminate sports events. They emit a white light. Metal halide lamps are
- very convenient to use. They come ready to plug in. The complete unit
- consists of a lamp (bulb), fixture (reflector) and long cord which plungs
- into a remote ballast. The fixture and lamp are lightweight and are easy to
- hang. Only one chain or rope is needed to suspend the fixture, which take
- up little space, making it easy to gain access to the garden.
- In an unpublished, controlled experiment, it was observed that marijuana
- plants responded better to light if the light came from a single point
- source such as a metal halide, rather than from emissions from a broad area
- as with fluorescents. Plants growing under metal halides develop quickly
- into strong plants. Flowering is profuse, with heavier budding than under
- fluroescents. Lower leaf development was better too, because the light
- penetrated the top leaves more.
- Metal halide lamps are hung in two configurations: veritcal and
- horizontal. The horizontal lamp focuses a higher percent of light on the
- garden, but it emits 10% less light. Most manufacturers and distributors
- sell verically hanging metal halides. However, it is worth the effort to
- find a horizontal unit.
- In order for a vertical hanging metal halide lamp to deliver light to the
- garden efficiently, the horizontal light that is emitting must be directed
- downward or the halide must be placed in the midst of the garden. It only
- becomes practical to remove the reflector and let the horizontally directed
- light radiate when the plants have grown a minimum of six feet tall.
- Reflectors for vertical lamps should be at least as long as the lamp. If a
- reflector does not cover the lamp completely, some of the light will be lost
- horizontally. Many firms sell kits with reflectors which do not cover the
- whole lamp.
- Reflectors can be modified using thin guage wire such as poultry wire and
- aluminum foil. A hole is cut out in the middle of the chicken wire frame so
- that it fits over the wide end of the reflector. Then it is shaped so that
- it will distribute the light as evenly as possible. Aluminum foil is placed
- over the poultry wire. (One grower made an outer frame of 1 x 2's which
- held the poultry wire, metal halide, and foil).
- Metal halide lamps come in 400, 1000, and 1500 watt sizes. The 1500 watt
- lamps are not recommended because they have a much shorter life than the
- other lamps. The 400 watt lamps can easily illuminate a small garden 5 x 5
- feet or smaller. These are ideal lights for a small garden. They are also
- good to brighten up dark spots in the garden.
- In European nurseries, 400 watt horizontal units are standard. They are
- attached to the ceiling and placed at even 5 foot intervals so that light
- from several lamps hits each plant. Each lamp beam diffuses as the vertical
- distance from the plants may be 6-8 feet, but no light is lost. The beams
- overlap. No shuttle type device is required. The same method can be used
- with horizontal 1000 watt lamps and 8 foot intervals. Vertical space should
- be at least 12 feet.
-
- HIGH PRESSURE SODIUM VAPOR LAMPS
-
- Sodium vapor lamps emit an orange or amber-looking light. They are the
- steet lamps that are commonly used these days. These lights look peculiar
- because they emit a spectrum that is heavily concentrated in the yellow,
- orange, and red spectrums with only a small amount of blue. They produce
- about 15% more light than metal halides. They use the same configuration as
- metal halides: lamp, reflector, and remote ballast.
- Growers originally used single sodium vapor lamps primarily for flowering
- because they thought that if the extra yellow and orange light was closer to
- the sun's spectrum in the fall, when the amount of blue light reaching Earth
- was limited, the red light would increase flowering or resin production. In
- another unpublished controlled experiment, a metal halide lamp and a sodium
- vapor lamp were used as the only sources of light in 2 different systems.
- The garden under the metal halide matured about a week faster than the
- garden under the sodium vapors. Resin content seemed about the same. Other
- growers have reported different results. They claim that the sodium vapor
- does increase THC and resin production. Plants can be grown under sodium
- vapor lights as the sole source of illumination.
- Many growers use sodium vapor lamps in conjunction with metal halides; a
- typical ratio is 2 halides to 1 sodium. Some growers use metal halides
- during the growth stages but change to sodium vapor lamps during the harvest
- cycle. This is not hard to do since both lamps fit in the same reflector.
- The lamps use different ballasts.
- High pressure sodium vapor lamps come in 400 and 100 watt configurations
- with remote ballasts designed specifically for cultivation. Smaller
- wattages designed for outdoor illumination are available from hardware
- stores. The small wattage lamps can be used for brightening dark areas of
- the garden or for hanging between the rows of plants in order to provide
- bright light below the tops.
-
- ACCESSORIES
-
- One of the most innovative accessories for lighting is the "Solar
- Shuttle" and its copies. This device moves a metal halide or sodium vapor
- lamp across a track 6 feet or longer. Because the lamp is moving, each
- plant comes directly under its field several times during the growing
- period. Instead of plants in the center receiving more light than those on
- the edge, the light is more equally distributed. This type of unit
- increases the total efficiency of the garden. Garden space can be increased
- by 15-20% or the lamp can be used to give the existing garden more light.
- Other units move the lamps over an arc path. The units take various
- amounts of time to complete a journey - from 40 seconds upward.
-
- ELECTRICITY AND LIGHTING
-
- At 110-120 volts, a 1000 watt lamp uses about 8.7 amps (watts divided by
- volts equals amps). Including a 15% margin for safety it can be figured as
- 10 amps. Many household circuits are rated for 20 or 30 amps. Running 2
- lights on a twenty amp circuit taxes it to capacity and is dangerous. If
- more electricity is required than can be safely supplied on a circuit, new
- wiring can be installed from the fusebox.
- All electrical equipment should be grounded.
- Some growers report that the electrical company's interest was aroused,
- sometimes innocently, when their electric bill began to spurt. After all,
- each hour a lamp is on it uses about 1 kilowatt hour.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 12 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Carbon Dioxide"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a gas which comprises about .03% (or 300 parts
- per million, "PPM") of the atmosphere. It is not dangerous. it is one of
- the basic raw materials (water is the other) required for photosynthesis.
- The plant makes a sugar molecule using light for energy, CO2 which is pulled
- out of the air, and water, which is pulled up from its roots.
- Scientists belive that early in the Earth's history the atmosphere
- contained many times the amount of CO2 it does today. Plants have never
- lost their ability to process gas at these high rates. In fact, with the
- Earth's present atmosphere, plant growth is limited.
- When plants are growing in an enclosed area, there is a limited amount of
- CO2 for them to use. When the CO2 is used up, the plant's photosynthesis
- stops. Only as more CO2 is provided can the plant use light to continue the
- process. Adequate amounts of CO2 may be easily replaced in well-ventilated
- areas, but increasing the amount of CO2 to .2% (2000 PPM) or 6 times the
- amount usually found in the atmosphere, can increase growth rate by up to 5
- times. For this reason, many commercial nurseries provide a CO2 enriched
- area for their plants.
- Luckily, CO2 can be supplied cheaply. At the most organic level, there
- are many metabolic processes that create CO2. For example, organic gardeners
- sometimes make compost in the greenhouse. About 1/6 to 1/4 of the pile's
- starting wet weight is converted to CO2 so that a 200 pound pile contributes
- 33-50 pounds of carbon to the gas. Carbon makes up about 27% of the weight
- and volume of the gas and oxygen makes up 73%, so that the total amount of
- CO2 created is 122 to 185 pounds produced over a 30 day period.
- Brewers and vintners would do well to ferment their beverages in the
- greenhouse. Yeast eat the sugars contained in the fermentation mix,
- released CO2 anf alcohol. The yeast produce quite a bit of CO2, when they
- are active.
- One grower living in a rural area has some rabbit hutches in his
- greenhouse. The rabbits use the oxygen produced by the plants, and in
- return, release CO2 by breathing. Another grower told me that he is
- supplying his plants with CO2 by spraying them periodically with seltzer
- (salt-free soda water), which is water with CO2 dissolved. He claims to
- double the plants' growth rate. This method is a bit expensive when the
- plants are large, but economical when they are small.
- A correspondent used the exhausts from his gas-fired water heater and
- clothes dryer. To make the area safe of toxic fumes that might be in the
- exhaust, he built a manually operated shut-off valve so that the spent air
- could be directed into the growing chamber or up a flue. Before he entered
- the room he sent any exhausts up the flue and turned on a ventilating fan
- which drew air out of the room.
- Growers do not have to become brewers, rabbit farmers, or spray their
- plants with Canada Dry. There are several economical and convenient ways to
- give the plants adequate amounts of CO2: using a CO2 generator, which burns
- natural gas or kerosene, using a CO2 tank with regulator, or by evaporating
- dry ice.
- To find out how much CO2 is needed to bring the growing area to the ideal
- 2000 PPM, multiply the cubic area of the growing room (length x width x
- height) by .002. The total represents the number of square feet of gas
- required to reach optimum CO2 range. For instance, a room 13' x 18' x 12'
- contains 2808 cubic feet: 2808 x .002 equals 5.6 cubic feet of CO2 required.
- The easiest way to supply the gas is to use a CO2 tank. All the equipment
- can be built from parts available at a welding suspply store or purchased
- totally assembled from many growing supply companies. Usually tanks come in
- 20 and 50 pound sizes, and can be bought or rented. A tank which holds 50
- pounds has a gross weight of 170 pounds when filled.
-
- A grow room of 500 cubic feet requires 1 cubic foot of CO2
- A grow room of 1000 cubic feet requires 2 cubic feet of CO2
- A grow room of 5000 cubic feet requires 10 cubic feet of CO2
- A grow room of 10,000 cubic feet requires 20 cubic feet of CO2
-
- To regulate dispersal of the gas, a combination flow meter/regulator is
- required. Together they regulate the flow between 10 and 50 cubic feet per
- hour. The regulator standardizes the pressure and regulates the number of
- cubic feet released per hour. A solenoid valve shuts the flow meter on and
- off as regulated by a multicycle timer, so the valve can be turned on and
- off several times each day. If the growing room is small, a short-range
- timer is needed. Most timers are calibrated in 1/2 hour increments, but a
- short-range timer keeps the valve open only a few minutes.
- To find out how long the valve should remain open, the numberof cubic
- feet of gas required (in our example 5.6 feet) is divided by the flow rate.
- For instance, if the flow rate is 10 cubic feet per hour, 5.6 divided by 10
- = .56 hours or 3 minutes (.56 X 60 minutes = 33 minutes). At 30 cubic feet
- per hour, the number of minutes would be .56 divided by 30 X 60 minutes =
- 11.2 minutes. [pH:Oh me oh my, there's another mistake! The ".56" in the
- latter equation should be 5.6, guess the people who did the book didn't
- bother to check his math!]
- The gas should be replenished ever two hours in a warm, well-lit room
- when the plants are over 3 feet high if there is no outside ventilation.
- When the plants are smaller or in a moderately lit room, they do not use the
- CO2 as fast. With ventilation the gas should be replenished once an hour or
- more frequently. Some growers have a ventilation fan on a timer in
- conjunction with the gas. The fan goes off when the gas is injected into
- the room. A few minutes before the gas is injected into the room, the fan
- starts and removes the old air. The gas should be released above the plants
- since the gas is heavier than air and sinks. A good way to disperse the gas
- is by using inexpensive "soaker hoses", sold in plant nurseries. These
- soaker hoses have tiny holes in them to let out the CO2.
- The CO2 tank is placed where it can be removed easily. A hose is run
- from the regulator unit (where the gas comes out) to the top of the garden.
- CO2 is cooler and heavier than air and will flow downward, reaching the top
- of the plants first.
- Dry ice is CO2 which has been cooled to -109 degrees, at which
- temperature it becomes a solid. It costs about the same as the gas in
- tanks. It usually comes in 30 pound blocks which evaporate at the rate of
- about 7% a day when kept in a freezer. At room temperatures, the gas
- evaporates considerably faster, probably supplying much more CO2 than is
- needed by the plants. One grower worked at a packing plant where dry ice
- was used. Each day he took home a couple of pounds, which fit into his
- lunch pail. When he came home he put the dry ice in the grow room, where it
- evaporated over the course of the day.
- Gas and kerosene generators work by burning hydrocarbons which release
- heat and create CO2 and water. Each pound of fuel burned produces about 3
- pounds of CO2, 1.5 pounds of water and about 21,800 BTU's (British Thermal
- Units) of heat. Some gases and other fuels may have less energy (BTU's) per
- pound. The fuel's BTU rating is checked before making calculations.
- Nursery supply houses sell CO2 generators especially designed for
- greenhouses, but household style kerosene or gas heaters are also suitable.
- They need no vent. The CO2 goes directly into the room's atmosphere. Good
- heaters burn cleanly and completely, leaving no residues, creating no carbon
- monoxide (a colorless, odorless, poisonous gas). Even so, it is a good idea
- to shut the heater off and vent the room before entering the space.
- If a heater is not working correctly, most likely it burns the fuel
- incompletely, creating an odor. More expensive units have pilots and
- timers; less expensive models must be adjusted manually. Heaters with
- polits can be modified to use a solenoid valve and timer.
- At room temperature, one pound of CO2 equals 8.7 cubic feet. It takes
- only 1/3 of a pound of kerosene (5.3 ounces) to make a pound of CO2. To
- calculate the amount of fuel required, the number of cubic feet of gas
- desired is divided by 8.7 and multiplied by .33. In our case, 5.6 cubic
- feet divided by 8.7 times .33 equals .21 pounds of fuel. To find out how
- many ounces this is, multiple .21 times 16 (the number of ounces in a pound)
- to arrive at a total of 3.3 ounces, a little less than half a cup (4
- ounces).
-
- 3/5ths ounce provides 1 cubic foot of CO2
- 1.2 ounces produce 2 cubic feet of CO2
- 3 ounces produce 5 cubic feet of CO2
- 6 ounces produce 10 cubic feet of CO2
-
- To find out fuel usage, divide the number of BTU's produced by 21,800.
- If a generator produces 12,000 BTU's an hour, it is using 12,000 divided by
- 21,800 or about .55 pounds of fuel per hour. However only .21 pounds are
- needed. To calculate the number of minutes the generator should be on, the
- amount of fuel needed is divided by the flow rate and multiplied by 60. In
- our case, .21 (amount of fuel needed) divided by .55 (flow rate) multiplied
- by 60 equals 22.9 minutes.
- The CO2 required for at least one grow room was supplied using gas lamps.
- The grower said that she thought it was a shame that the fuel was used only
- for the CO2 and thought her plants would benefit from the additional light.
- She originally had white gas lamps spaced evenly throughout the garden. She
- replaced them after the first crop with gas lamps all hooked up to a central
- LP gas tank. She only had to turn the unit on and light the lamps each day.
- It shut itself off. She claims the system worked very well.
- CO2 should be replenished every 3 hours during the light cycle, since it
- is used up by the plants and leaks from the room into the general
- atmosphere. Well-ventilated rooms should be replenished more often. It is
- probably more effective to have a generator or tank releasing CO2 for longer
- periods at slower rates than for shorter periods of time at higher rates.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 13 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Temperature"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Marijuana plants are very hardy and survive over a wide range of
- temperatures. They can withstand extremely hot weather, up to 120 degrees,
- as long as they have adequate supplies of water. Cannabis seedlings
- regularly survive light frost at the beginning of the season.
- Both high and low temperatures slow marijuana's rate of metabolism and
- growth. The plants function best in moderate temperatures - between 60 and
- 85 degrees. As more light is available, the ideal temperature for normal
- plant growth increases. If plants are given high temperatures and only
- moderate light, the stems elongate. Conversely, strong light and low
- temperatures decrease stem elongation. During periods of low light, strong
- elongation is decreased by lowering the temperature. Night temperatures
- should be 10-15 degrees lower than daytime temperatures.
- Temperatures below 50 degrees slow growth of most varieties. When the
- temperature goes below 40 degrees, the plants may experience some damage and
- require about 24 hours to resume growth. Low nighttime temperatures may
- delay or prevent bud maturation. Some equatorial varieties stop growth after
- a few 40 degree nights.
- A sunny room or one illuminated by high wattage lamps heats up rapdily.
- During the winter the heat produced may keep the room comfortable. However
- the room may get too warm during the summer. Heat rises, so that the
- temperature is best measured at the plants' height. A room with a 10 foot
- ceiling may feel uncomfortably warm at head level but be fine for plants 2
- feet tall.
- If the room has a vent or window, an exhaust fan can be used to cool it.
- Totally enclosed spaces can be cooled using a water conditioner which cools
- the air by evaporating water. If the room is lit entirely by lamps, the
- day/night cycle can be reversed so that the heat is generated at night, when
- it is cooler out.
- Marijuana is a low-temperature tolerant. Outdoors, seedlings sometimes
- pierce snow cover, and older plants can withstand short, light frosts.
- Statistically, more males develop in cold temperatures. However, low
- temperatures slow down the rate of plant metabolism. Cold floors lower the
- temperature in containers and medium, slowing germination and growth.
- Ideally, the medium temperature should be 70 degrees. There are several
- ways to warm the medium. The floor can be insulated using a thin sheet of
- styrofoam, foam rubber, wood or newspaper. The best way to insulate a
- container from a cold floor is to raise the container so that there is an
- air space between it and the floor.
- Overhead fans, which circulate the warm air downward from the top of the
- room also warm the medium.
- When the plants' roots are kept warm, the rest of the plant can be kept
- cooler with no damage. Heat cables or heat mats, which use small amounts of
- electricity, can be used to heat the root area. These are available at
- nursery supply houses.
- When watering, tepid water should be used. Cultivators using systems
- that recirculate water can heat the water with a fish tank heater and
- thermostat. If the air is cool, 45-60 degrees, the water can be heated to
- 90 degres. If the air is warm, over 60 degrees, 70 degrees for the water is
- sufficient. The pipes and medium absorb the water down a bit before it
- reaches the roots.
- Gardens using artificial lighting can generate high air temperatures.
- Each 100 watt metal halide and ballast emits just a little less energy can a
- 10 amp heater. Several lights can raise the temperature to an intolerable
- level. In this case a heat exchanger is required. A venting fan or misters
- can be used to lower temperatures. Misters are not recommended for use
- around lights.
- Greenhouses can also get very hot during the summer. If the sun is very
- bright, opaquing paint may lower the amount of light and heat entering the
- greenhouse. Fans and cooling mats also help. Cooling mats are fibrous
- plastic mats which hold moisture. Fans blow air through the mats which
- lowers the greenhouse temperature. They are most effective in hot dry
- areas. They are available througn nursery supply houses.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 15 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "pH and Water"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- The pH is the measure of acid-alkalinity balance of a solution. It is
- measured on a scale of 0-14, with 0 being the most acid, 7 being neutral,
- and 14 being most alkaline. [pH:In case you're wondering, I'm a total 0!]
- Most nutrients the plants use are soluble only in a limited range of acidity,
- between about 6 to about 7.5, neutral. Should the water become too acidic or
- alkaline, the nutrients dissolved in the water become too acidic or alkaline,
- the nutrients dissolved in the water precipitate and become unavailable to the
- plants. When the nutrients are locked up, plant growth is slowed. Typically,
- a plant growing in an environment with a low pH will be very small, often
- growing only a few inches in several months. Plants growing in a high pH
- environment will look pale and sickly and also have stunted growth.
- All water has a pH which can be measured using aquarium or garden pH
- chemical reagent test kits or a pH meter. All of these items are available
- at local stores and are easy to use. Water is pH-adjusted after nutrients
- are added, since nutrients affect the pH.
- Once the water is tested it should be adjusted if it does not fall within
- the pH range of 6 to 7. Ideally the range should be about 6.2-6.8.
- Hydroponic supply companies sell measured adjusters which are very
- convenient and highly recommended. The water-nutrient solution can be
- adjusted using common household chemicals. Water which is too acidic can be
- neutralized using bicarbonate of soda, wood ash, or by using a solution of
- lime in the medium.
- Water which is too alkaline can be adjusted using nitric acid, sulfuric
- acid, citric acid (Vitamin C) or vinegar. The water is adjusted using small
- increments of chemicals. Once a standard measure of how much chemical is
- needed to adjust the water, the process becomes fast and easy to do.
- Plants affect the pH of the water solution as they remove various
- nutrients which they use. Microbes growing in the medium also change the
- pH. For this reason growers check and adjust the pH periodically, about
- once every two weeks.
- The pH of water out of the tap may change with the season so it is a good
- idea to test it periodically.
- Some gardeners let tap water sit for a day so that the chlorine
- evaporates. They believe that chlorine is harmful to plants.
- The pH of the planting medium affects the pH of the liquid in solution.
- Medium should be adjusted so that it tests between 6.2-6.8. This is done
- before the containers are filled so that the medium could be adjusted in
- bulk. Approximately 1-2 lbs. of dolomitic limestone raises the pH of 100
- gallons (4.5-9 grams per gallon) of soil 1 point. Gypsum can be used to
- lower the pH of soil or medium. Both limestone and gypmsum have limited
- solubility.
- There are many forms of limestone which have various effectiveness
- depending on their chemistry. Each has a rating on the package.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 14 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Air and Humidity"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Besides temperatures and CO2 content, air has other qualities including
- dust content, electrical charge and humidity.
-
- Dust
-
- "Dust" is actually composed of many different-sized solid and liquid
- particles which float in the gaseous soup. The particles include organic
- fibers, hair, other animal and vegetable particles, bacteria, viruses, smoke
- and odoriferous liquid particles such as essential oils, and water-soluble
- condensates. Virtually all of the particles have a positive electrical
- charge, which means that they are missing an electron, and they float (due
- to electrical charge) through various passing gases.
-
- The dust content of the air affects the efficiency of the plant's ability
- to photosynthesize. Although floating dust may block a small amount of
- light, dust which has precipitated on leaves may block large amounts.
- Furthermore, the dust clogs the pores through which plants transpire. Dust
- can easily be washedoff leaves using a fine mist spray. Water must be
- prevented from touching and shattering the hot glass of the lights.
-
- Negative Ions
-
- in unindustrialized verdant areas and near large bodies of water, the air
- is negatively charged, that is, there are electrons floating in the air
- unattached to atoms or molecules. In industrialized areas or very dry
- regions, the air is positively charged; there are atoms and molecules
- missing electrons.
- Some researchers claim that the air's electrical charge affects plant
- growth (and also animal behavior). They claim that plants in a positively
- charged environment grow slower than those in a negatively charged area.
- Regardless of the controversy regarding growth and the air's electrical
- charge, the presence of negative ions creates some readily observable
- effects. Odors are characteristic of positively charged particles floating
- in the air. A surplus of negative ions causes the particles to precipitate
- so that there are no odors. With enough negative ions, a room filled with
- pungent, flowering sinsemilla is odorless.
- Spaces with a "surplus" negative ion charge have clean, fresh smelling
- air. Falling water, which generates negative ions, characteristically
- creates refreshing air. Dust particles are precipitated so that there are
- fewer bacteria and fungus spores floating in the air, as well as much less
- dust in general. This lowers the chance of infection.
- Many firms manufacture "Negative Ion Generators", "Ionizers", and "Ion
- Fountains", which disperse large quantities of negative ions into the
- atmosphere. These units are inexpensive, safe and recommended for all
- growing areas. Ion generators precipitate particles floating in the air.
- With most generators, the precipitating particles land within a radius of
- two feet of the point of dispersal, collecting quickly and developing into a
- thick film of grime. Newspaper is placed around the unit so that the space
- does not get soiled. Some newer units have a precipitator which collects
- dust on a charged plate instead of the other surrounding surfaces. This
- plate can be rougly simulated by grounding a sheet a aluminum foil. To
- ground foil, either attach it directly to a metal plumbing line or grounding
- box; for convenience, the foil can be held with an alligator clip attacked
- to the electrical wire, which is attached to the grounding source. As the
- foil gets soiled, it is replaced.
-
- Humidity
-
- Cannabis grows best in a mildly humid environment: a relative humidy of
- 40-60 percent. Plants growing in drier areas may experience chronic wilt
- and necrosis of the leaf tips. Plants growing in a wetter environment
- usually experience fewer problms; however, the buds are more susceptible to
- molds which can attack a garden overnight and ruin a crop.
- Growers are rarely faced with too dry a growing area. Since the space is
- enclosed, water which is evaporated or transpired by the plants increases
- the humidity considerably. If there is no ventilation, a large space may
- reach saturation level within a few days. Smaller spaces usually do not
- have this buildup because there is usually enough air movement to dissipate
- the humdity. The solution may be as easy as opening a window. A small
- ventilation fan can move quite a bit of air out of a space and may be a
- convenient way of solving the problem. Humidity may be removed using a
- dehumidifier in gardens without access to convenient ventilation.
- Dehumidifiers work the same way a refrigerator does except that instead
- of cooling a space, a series of tubes is cooled causing atmospheric water to
- condense. The smallest dehumidifiers (which can dry out a large space) use
- about 15 amps. Usually the dehumidifier needs to run only a few hours a
- day. If the plant regimen includes a dark cycle, then the dehumidifier can
- be run when the lights are off, to ease the electrical load.
-
- Air Circulation
-
- A close inspection of a marijuana leaf reveals many tiny hairs and a
- rough surface. Combined, these trap air and create a micro-environment
- around the plant. The trapped air contains more humidity and oxygen and is
- warmer, which differs significantly in the composition and temperature from
- the surrounding atmosphere. The plant uses CO2 so there is less left in the
- air surrounding the leaf. Marijuana depends on air currents to move this
- air and renew the micro-environment. If the air is not moved vigorously,
- the growth rate slows, since the micro-environment becomes CO2 depleted.
- Plants develop firm, sturdy stems as the result of environmental
- stresses. Outdoors, the plants sway with the wind, causing tiny breaks in
- the stem. These are quickly repaired bythe plant's reinforcing the original
- area and leaving it stronger than it was originally. Indoors, plants don't
- usually need to cope with these stresses so their stems grow weak unless the
- plants receive a breeze or are shaken by the stems daily.
- A steady air flow form the outdoor ventilation may be enough to keep the
- air moving. If this is not available, a revolving fan placed several feet
- from the nearest plant or a slow-moving overhead fan can solve the problem.
- Screen all air intake fans to prevent pests.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 16 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Nutrients"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Marijuana requires a total of 14 nutrients which it obtains through its
- roots. Nitrogen (N), Phosophorous (P), and Potassium (K) are called the
- macro-nutrients because they are used in large quantities by the plant. The
- percentages of N, P, and K are always listed in the same order on fertilizer
- packages.
- Calcium (Ca), sulfur (S), and magnesium (Mg) are also required by the
- plants in fairly large quantities. These are often called the secondary
- nutrients.
- Smaller amounts of iron (Fe), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), boron (B),
- cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), molybdenum (Mo) and chlorine (Cl) are also needed.
- These are called micro-nutrients.
- [pH:And you thought chemistry wasn't good for anything!]
- Marijuana requires more N before flowering than later in its cycle. When
- it begins to flowe, marijuana's use of P increases. Potassium requirements
- increase after plants are fertilized as a result of seed production.
- Plants which are being grown in soil mixes or mixes with nutrients added
- such as compost, manure or time-releasing fertilizers may need no additional
- fertilizing or only supplemental amounts of the plants begin to show
- deficiencies.
- The two easiest and most reliable ways to meet the plant's needs are to
- use a prepared hydroponic fertilizer or an organic water-soluble fertilizer.
- Hydroponic fertilizers are blended as complete balanced formulas. Most
- non-hydroponic fertilizers usually contain only the macronutrients (N, P,
- and K). Organic fertilizers such as fish emulsion and other blends contain
- trace elements which are found in the organic matter from which they are
- derived.
- Most indoor plant fertilizers are water-soluble. A few of them are
- time-release formulas which are mixed into the medium as it is being
- prepared. Plants grown in soil mixes can usually get along using regular
- fertilizers but plants grown in prepared soilless mixes definitely require
- micronutrients.
- As the seeds germinate they are given a nutrient solution high in N such
- as a 20-10-10 or 17-10-12. These are just two possible formulas; any with a
- high proportion of N will do.
- Formulas which are not especially high in N can be used and supplemented
- with a high N ferilizer such as fish emulsion (which may create an odor) or
- the Sudbury X component fertilizer which is listed 44-0-0. Urine is also
- very high in N and is easily absorbed by the plants. It should be diluted
- to one cup urine per gallon of water.
- The plants should be kept on a high N fertilizer regimen until they are
- put into the flowering regimen.
- During the flowering cycle, the plants do best with a formula lower in N
- and higher in P, which promotes bloom. A fertilizer such as 5-20-10 or
- 10-19-12 will do. (Once again, these are typical formulas, similar ones
- will do).
- Growers who make their own nutrient mixes based on parts per million of
- nutrient generally use the following formulas.
-
- Chart 15-1: Nutrient/Water Solution In Parts Per Million (PPM)
-
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
- | | N | P | K |
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
- | Germination - 15 to 20 days | 110-150 | 70-100 | 50-75 |
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
- | Fast Growth | 200-250 | 60-80 | 150-200 |
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
- | Pre-Flowering | 70-100 | 100-150 | 75-100 |
- | 2 weeks before turning light down | | | |
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
- | Flowering | 0-50 | 100-150 | 50-75 |
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
- | Seeding - fertilized flowers | 100-200 | 70-100 | 100-150 |
- +-----------------------------------+---------+---------+---------+
-
- Plants can be grown using a nutrient solution containing no N for the
- last 10 days. Many of the larger leaves yellow and wither as the N migrates
- from the old to the new growth. The buds are less green and have less of a
- minty (chlorophyll) taste.
- Many cultivators use several brands and formulas of fertilizer. They
- either mix them together in solution or switch brands each feeding.
- Plant N requirements vary by weather as well as growth cycle. Plants
- growing under hot conditions are given 10-20% less N or else they tend to
- elongate and to grow thinner, weaker stalks. Plants in a cool or cold
- regimen may be given 10-20% more N. More N is given under high light
- conditions, less is used under low light conditions.
- Organic growers can make "teas" from organic nutrients by soaking them in
- water. Organic nutrients usually contain micronutrients as well as the
- primary ones. Manures and blood meal are among the most popular organic
- teas, but other organic sources of nutrients include urine, which may be the
- best source for N, as well as blood meal and tankage. Organic fertilizers
- vary in their formulas. The exact formula is usually listed on the label.
- Here is a list of common organic fertilizers which can be used to make
- teas:
-
- Chart 15-2: Organic Fertilizers
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Fertilizer | N | P | K | Remarks |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Bloodmeal | 15 | 1.3 | .7 | Releases nutrients easily |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Cow manure | 1.5 | .85 | 1.75 | The classic tea. Well- |
- | (dried) | | | | balanced formula. Medium |
- | | | | | availability. |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Dried blood | 13 | 3 | 0 | Nutrients dissolve easier |
- | | | | | than bloodmeal |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Chicken manure | 3.5 | 1.5 | .85 | Excellent nutrients |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Wood ashes | 0 | 1.5 | 7 | Water-soluble. Very alkaline |
- | | | | | except with acid wood such |
- | | | | | as walnut |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Granite dust | 0 | 0 | 5 | Dissolves slowly |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Rock phosphate | 0 | 35 | 0 | Dissolves gradually |
- | (phosphorous) | | | | |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
- | Urine (human, | .5 | .003 | .003 | N immediately available |
- | fresh) | | | | |
- +----------------+-----+------+------+---------------------------------+
-
- Commercial water-soluble fertilizers are available. Fish emulsion
- fertilizer comes in 5-1-1 and 5-2-2 formulas and has been used by satisfied
- growers for years.
- A grower cannot go wrong changing hydroponic water/nutrient solutions at
- least once a month. Once every two weeks is even better. The old solution
- could be measured, reformulated, supplemented and re-used; unless large
- amounts of fertilizer are used, such as in a large commercial greenhouse, it
- is not worth the effort. The old solution may have many nutrients left, but
- it may be unbalanced since the plants have drawn specific chemicals. The
- water can be used to water houseplants or an outdoor garden, or to enrich a
- compost pile.
- Experienced growers fertilize by eyeing the plants and trying to
- determine their needs when minor symptoms of deficiencies become apparent.
- If the nutrient added cures the deficiency, the plant usually responds in
- apparent ways within one or two days. First the spread of the symptom
- stops. With some minerals, plant parts that were not too badly damaged
- begin to repair themselves. Plant parts which were slightly discolored may
- return to normal. Plant parts which were severely damaged or suffered from
- necrosis do not recover. The most dramatic changes usually appear in new
- growth. These parts grow normally. A grower can tell just by plant parts
- which part grew before deficiencies were corrected. [pH:What's in yer
- nuggets? Parts. Plant parts. Processed plant parts. HAHAHAHAHAHAHA]
- Fertilizers should be applied on the low side of recommended rates.
- Overdoses quickly (within hours) result in wilting and then death. The
- symptoms are a sudden wilt with leaves curled under. To save plants
- suffering from toxic overdoses of nutrients, plain water is run through
- systems to wash out the medium.
- Gardens with drainage can be cared for using a method commercial
- nurseries employ. The plants are watered each time with a dilute
- nutrient/water solution, usually 20-25% of full strength. Excess water runs
- off. While this method uses more water and nutrients than other techniques,
- it is easy to set up and maintain.
- When nutrient deficiencies occur, especially multiple or micronutrient
- deficiencies, there is a good chance that the minerals are locked up
- (precipitated) because of pH. [pH:That's not very fair, I wasn't even
- there!] Rather than just adding more nutrients, the pH must be checked
- first. If needed, the pH must be changed by adjusting the water.
- If the pH is too high, the water is made a lower pH than it would
- ordinarily be; if too low the water is made a higher pH. To get nutrients
- to the plant parts immediately, a dilute foliar spray is used. If the plant
- does not respond to the foliar spray, it is being treated with the wrong
- nutrient.
-
- NUTRIENTS
-
- Nitrogen (N)
-
- Marijuana uses more N than any other nutrient. It is used in the
- manufacture of chlorophyll. N migrates from old growth to new, so that a
- shortage is likely to cause first pale green leaves and then the yellowing
- and withering of the lowers leaves as the nitrogen travels to new buds.
- Other deficiency symptoms include smaller leaves, slow growth and a sparse
- rather than bushy profile.
- N-deficient plants respond quickly to fertilization. Within a day or
- two, pale leaves become greener and the rate and size of new growth
- increases. Good water-soluble sources of nitrogen include most indoor and
- hydroponic fertizliers, fish emulsion, and urine, along with teas made from
- manures, dried blood or bloodmeal. There are many organic additives which
- release N over a period of time that can be added to the medium at the time
- of planting. These include manures, blood, cottonseed meal, hair, fur, or
- tankage.
-
- Phosphorous (P)
-
- P is used by plants in the transfer of light energy to chemical
- compounds. It is also used in large quantities for root growth and
- flowering. Marijuana uses P mostly during early growth and flowering.
- Fertilizers and nutrient mixes usually supply adequate amounts of P
- during growth stages so plants usually do not experience a deficiency. Rock
- phosphate and bone meal are the organic fertilizers usually recommended for
- P deficiency. However they release the mineral slowly, and are more suited
- to outdoor gardening than indoors. They can be added to medium to
- supplement soluble fertilizers.
- P-devicient plants have small dark green leaves, with red stems and red
- veins. The tips of lower leaves sometimes die. Eventually the entire lower
- leaves yellow and die. Fertilization affects only new growth.
- Marijuana uses large quantities of P during flowering. Many fertilizer
- manufacturers sell mixes high in P specifically for blooming plants.
-
- Potassium (K)
-
- K is used by plants to regulate carbohydrate metabolism, chlorophyll
- synthesis, and protein synthesis as well as to provide resistance to
- disease. Adequate amounts of K result in strong, sturdy stems while
- slightly deficient plants often grow taller, thinner stems. Plants
- producing seed use large amounts of K. Breeding plants can be given K
- supplements to assure well-developed seed.
- Symptoms of greater deficiencies are more apparent on the sun leaves (the
- large lower leaves). Necrotic patches are found on the leaf tips and then
- in patches throughout the leaf. The leaves also look pale green.
- Stems and flowers on some plants turn deep red or purple as a result of K
- deficiencies. However, red stems are a genetic characteristic of some
- plants so this symptom is not foolproof. Outdoors, a cold spell can
- precipitate K and make it unavailable to the plants, so that almost
- overnight the flowers and stems turn purple.
- K deficiency can be treated with any high-K fertilizer. Old growth does
- not absorb the nutrient and will not be affected. However, the new growth
- will show no signs of deficiency within 2 weeks. For faster results the
- fetilizer can be used as a foliar spray. K deficiency does not seem to be a
- crucial problem. Except for the few symptoms, plants do not seem to be
- affected by it.
-
- Calcium (Ca)
-
- Ca is used during cell splitting, and to build the cell membranes.
- Marijuana also stores "excess" Ca for reasons unknown. I have never seen a
- case of Ca deficiency in cannabis. Soils and fertilizers usually contain
- adequate amounts. It should be added to planting mixes when they are being
- formulated at the rate of 1 tablespoon per gallon or 1/2 cup per cubic foot
- of medium.
-
- Sulfur (S)
-
- S is used by the plant to help regulate metabolism, and as a constituent
- of some vitamins, amino acids and proteins. It is plentiful in soil and
- hydroponic mixes.
- S deficiencies are rare. First, new growth yellows and the entire plant
- pales.
- s deficiencies are easily solved using Epsom salts at the rate of 1
- tablespoon per gallon of water.
-
- Magnesium (Mg)
-
- Mg is the central atom in chlorophyll and is also used in production of
- carbohydrates. (Chlorophyll looks just like hemoglobin in blood, but has a
- Mg atom. Hemoglobin has an Fe atom). In potted plants, Mg deficiency is
- fairly common, since many otherwise well-balanced fertilizers do not contain
- it.
- Deficiency symptoms start on the lower leaves which turn yellow, leaving
- only the veins green. The leaves curl up and die along the tips and edges.
- Growing shoots are pale green and, as the condition continues, turn almost
- white.
- Mg deficiency is easily treated using Epsom salts (MgSO4) at the rate of
- 1 tablespoon per gallon of water. For faster results, a foliar spray is
- used. Once Mg deficiency occurs, Epsom salts should be added to the
- solution each time it is changed. Dolomitic limestone contains large
- amounts of Mg.
-
- Iron (Fe)
-
- Fe deficiency is not uncommon. The growing shoots are pale or white,
- leaving only dark green veins. The symptoms appear similar to Mg
- deficiencies but Fe deficiencies do not affect the lower leaves. Fe
- deficiencies are often the result of acid-alkalinity imbalances.
- Fe deficiencies sometimes occur together with zinc (Zn) and manganese
- (Mn) deficiencies so that several symptoms appear simultaneously.
- Deficiencies can be corrected by adjusting the pH, adding rusty water to
- the medium, or using a commercial supplement. Fe supplements are sold alone
- or in a mix combined with Zn and Mn. To prevent deficiencies, some growers
- add a few rusting nails to each container. One grower using a reservoir
- system added a pound of nails to the holding tank. The nails added Fe to
- the nutrient solution as they rusted. Dilute foliar sprays can be used to
- treat deficiencies.
-
- Manganese (Mn)
-
- Symptoms of Mn deficiency include yellowing and dying of tissue between
- veins, first appearing on new growth and then throughout the plant.
- Deficiencies are solved using an Fe-Zn-Mn supplement.
-
- Zinc (Zn)
-
- Zn deficiency is noted first as yellowing and necrosis of older leaf
- margins and tips and then as twisted, curled new growth. Treatment with a
- Fe-Zn-Mn supplement quickly relieves symptoms. A foliar spray speeds the
- nutrients to the leaf tissue.
-
- Boron (B)
-
- B deficiency is uncommon and does not usually occur indoors.
- Symptoms of B deficiency start at the growing tips, which turn grey or
- brown and then die. This spreads to the lateral shoots.
- A B deficiency (pH:A, B, deficient C!) is treated by using 1/2 teaspoon
- boric acid, available in pharmacies, added to a gallon of water. One
- treatment is usually sufficient.
-
- Molybdenum (Mo)
-
- Mo is used by plants in the conversion of N to forms that the plant can
- use. It is also a consituent of some enzymes. Deficiency is unusual
- indoors.
- Symptoms start with paleness, then yellowing of middle leaves which
- progress to the new shoots and growing tips, which grow twisted. The early
- symptoms almost mimic N deficiency. Treatment with N may temporarily
- relieve the symptoms but they return within a few weeks.
- Mo is included in hydroponic fertilizers and in some trace element mixes.
- It can be used as a foliar spray.
-
- Copper (Cu)
-
- Cu is used by plants in the transfer of electrical charges which are
- manipulated by the plant to absorb nutrients and water. It is also used in
- the regulation of water content and is a constituent of some enzymes.
- Cu deficiencies are rare and mimic symptoms of overfertilization. The
- leaves are limp and turn under at the edges. Tips and edges of the leaves
- may die and whole plant looks wilted.
- A fungicide, copper sulfate, (CuSO$) can be used as a foliar spray to
- relieve the deficiency.
-
- NUTRIENT ADDITIVES
-
- Various additives are often suggested to boost the nutrient value of the
- water/nutrient solution. Here are some of them:
- WETTING AGENTS. Water holds together through surface tension, preventing
- it from dispersing easily over dry surfaces. Wetting agents decrease the
- surface tension and allow the water to easily penetrate evenly throughout
- the medium preventing dry spots. Wetting agents are helpful when they are
- used with fresh medium and as an occasional additive. Wetting agents should
- not be used on a regular basis. They may interfere with plants' ability to
- grow root hairs, which are ordinarily found on the roots. They are
- available at most plant nurseries.
- SEAWEED. Washed, ground seaweed contains many trace elements and
- minerals used by plants. It may also contain some hormones or organic
- nutrients not yet identified.
- KELP. Kelp seems to be similar to seaweed in nutrient value. Proponents
- claim that it has other, as yet undefined organic chemicals that boost plant
- growth.
- SEA WATER. Salt water contains many trace elements and organic
- compounds. Some hydroponists claim that adding 5-10% sea water to the
- nutrient solution prevents trace element problems. It may be risky.
-
-
- DEFICIENCIES OF NUTRIENT ELEMENTS IN MARIJUANA
-
- Suspected Element
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Symptoms | N | P | K | Mg | Fe | Cu | Zn | B | Mo | Mn| Over |
- | | | | | | | | | | | |Fertil|
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Yellowing of: | | | | | | | | | | | |
- | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- | Younger leaves | | | | | X | | | | | X | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Middle leaves | | | | | | | | | X | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Older leaves | X | | X | X | | | X | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Between veins | | | | X | | | | | | X | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Old leaves drop | X | | | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Leaf Curl Over | | | | X | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Leaf Curl Under | | | X | | | X | | | | | X |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Leaf tips burn | | | | | | | | | | | |
- | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- | Younger leaves | | | | | | | | X | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Older leaves | X | | | | | | X | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Young leaves wrinkle | | | | | | | | | | | |
- | and curl | | | X | | | | X | X | X | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Necrosis | | | X | X | X | | X | | | X | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Leaf growth stunted | X | X | | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Dark green/purplish | | | | | | | | | | | |
- | leaves and stems | | X | | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Pale green leaf color| X | | | | | | | | X | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Mottling | | | | | | | X | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Spindly | X | | | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Soft stems | X | | X | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Hard/brittle stems | | X | X | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Growing tips die | | | X | | | | | X | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Stunted root growth | | X | | | | | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
- | Wilting | | | | | | X | | | | | |
- +----------------------+---+---+---+----+----+----+----+---+----+---+------+
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 17 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Novel Gardens"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Many people who would like to grow their own think that they don't have
- the space. There are novel techniques that people can use to grow grass
- anywhere. Even people with only a closet, crawl space or just a shelf can
- grow their own.
- The smallest space that can be used is a shelf 15-24 inches high. First,
- the space should be prepared as any other garden by making it reflective,
- using flat white paint, the dull side of aluminum foil, or white plastic.
- Fluorescents are the easiest and best way to illuminate the space. About
- twenty watts per square foot are used, or two tubes per foot of width. VHO
- fluorescents can be used to deliver more light to the system.
- Plants can be started in 6 ounce cups or 8 to 16 ounce milk cartons
- placed in trays for easier handling.
- With a shelf of 3 feet or higher, plants can be grown in larger
- containers such as 4 to 6 inch pots, half gallon milk containers trimmed to
- hold only a quart.
- The plants can be grown vertically only, as they normally grow, or moved
- to a horizontal position so that the main stem runs parallel to the light
- tubes. The plants' new growth will immediately face upwards towards the
- light. One gardener used an attic space only 4 feet tall. She let the
- plants grow until they reached 3 feet and then turned them on their side.
- They used more floor space so she opened up a second bank of lights. At
- maturity, the plants were 3.5 feet long and 2.5 feet tall.
- Another grower turned his basement with an 8 foot ceiling into a duplex
- growing chamber. Each unit had 3 foot tall plants.
- If the plants are to be turned horizontally, then they are best grown in
- plastic bags or styrofoam cups so that they can be watered easily in their
- new positions. After being turned on the side, a hole is cut in the new top
- so the plants can be watered easily.
- Some growers have wall space without much depth. This space can be
- converted to a growing area very easily. The space is painted white and a
- curtain is made so that the space is seperated from the surrounding
- environment; this will keep light in and offers protection from nosey
- guests.
- The fluorescents should be placed so that they form a bank facing the
- plants. Although the plants naturally spread out, their depth or width can
- be controlled by training them using stakes or chicken wire placed on a
- frame. Wire or plastic netting is attached to the walls so that there is at
- least a 1 inch space between the wire and the wall. Some people build a
- frame out of 2x4's. Twist ties are used to hold the branches to the frame.
- Additional light can be supplied by placing a fluorescent unit on either end
- of the garden or along its length.
- Growers who have a little more space for their garden, with a minimum
- width of 1 or 2 feet, can grow plants without training them. Fluorescent
- lights can be used to light the garden by hanging the light fixture from the
- top. All sides should be covered with reflective material. A metal halide
- lamp mounted on a movable apparatus will help the plants grow even faster so
- that the entire garden is illuminated several times during each light cycle.
- Some people can spare only a small closet. Closets usually are designed
- in one of two shapes: square or long and rectangular. In any closet up to
- six feet long the simplest way to grow is by painting the inside of the
- closet white and hanging a metal halide light from the ceiling. Closets
- with dimensions of 5x5 or less need only a 400 watt metal halide although
- they can accomodate 1000 watt lamps. Larger areas need at least two 400
- watt halide lamps.
- Thin, rectangular closets are served best by a metal halide unit mounted
- on a solar shuttle type device. A fluorescent light unit hung from above
- the garden also works well. Additional fluorescent tubes can be used to
- supplement the top lights. It is convenient to mount them on either end of
- the hanging fixture if the closet is long enough so that they do not use
- potential growing space. A closet 2 feet by 7 feet might be illuminated by
- a 400 watt metal halide on a track, two 6 foot long VHOs or 4 regular
- fluorescent tubes hung from the ceiling. A grower might also use 14
- screw-in 8 inch circular reflectors mounted on two 2x4s and hung above the
- garden. About 8 combination 8 and 12 inch circular fixtures will also light
- the area.
- As the plants grow taller, fluorescent lit gardens will respond to
- fluorescent tubes placed on the sides of the garden below the tops of the
- plants. This light wll help lower buds develop.
- One of the main problems inherent in the nature of small gardens is the
- lack of ventilation and CO2. For good growth rates the air should be
- enriched with CO2 or provided with a fan for ventilation.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 18 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Containers"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- To save space, plants can be germinated in small containers and
- transplanted to progressively larger ones.
- Seeds can be germinated in 2 x 1 inch trays or in peat pellets and remain
- in these containers for about one week.
- Four inch diameter containers can hold the plants for 2 to 3 weeks
- without inhibiting growth.
- Styrofoam cups weighted at the bottom with sand or gravel so they don't
- tip over are convenient germinating containers. If plants are to be
- germinated at one location and then moved to another location, styrofoam and
- other lightweight plastic cups are ideal containers.
- Six ounce cups hold plants for about 7-10 days after germination.
- Sixteen ounce cups hold plants 10-20 days, as long as the plants receive
- frequent water replenishments.
- Half gallon containers can support plants for 25-40 days.
- Plants probably grow a bit faster without being transplanted. However,
- the saving in space for a multi-crop system or even a multi-light system
- more than compensates for the loss in growth rate. Figure that each
- transplanting costs the plants 3-4 days of growth. Growers using a 2 light
- system need to use only one lamp for the first 4-6 weeks the plants are
- growing. Multi-crop gardens need to use only a fraction of the space for
- the first 3 to 8 weeks after germination.
- Some growers sex the plants before either the first or second
- transplanting. They find it easier to control the light-darkness cycle in a
- small space. Another crop's flowering cycle may coincide with the
- seedlings. To sex the small plants, only a small area is required in the
- grow room.
- A good rule of thumb is that for each two feet of growth, a half gallon
- of growing medium is required in a garden in which fertilizers are supplied
- throughout the growing period. A 2 foot plant requires a 1/2 gallon
- container, a 5 foot plant uses a 2.5 gallon container and a 10 foot plant
- requires a 5 gallon unit. Of course, plants' width or depth varies too, so
- these are approximations. Certainly there is no harm done in growing a
- plant in a container larger than is required. However, growing plants in
- containers which are too small delays growth or may even stunt the plants.
- Plants growing in soil or compost-based mediums do better in slightly
- larger containers. A rule of thumb for them is a 3/4 gallon medium for each
- foot of growth. A 5 foot plant requires a 3 and 3/4 gallon container.
- One grower wrote "I never use more than 4 gallon containers and have
- grown plants to 12 feet high with no signs of deficiencies. I was able to
- water at 2-3 day intervals. My 3 month old plants under light were in 1/2
- gallon containers with and without wicks." This grower always uses small
- (1/2 gallon) containers for his spring greenhouse crop.
- A plant growing in an organic-based medium such as soil-compost-manure
- and additives needs no fertilization if it is given a large enough
- container. For a five month growing season, plants in a rich mixture
- require 1 to 1.5 gallons medium per foot. A 5 foot plant requires a
- container holding 5-7.5 gallons.
- Containers should have a slight graduation so that plants and medium can
- slide out easily.
- Plastic containers or pots are the most convenient to use. They are
- lightweight, do not break and are inert. Metal containers react with the
- nutrients in the solution. Plastic bags are convenient containers. Grow
- bags have a square bottom so that they balance easily. However growers use
- all kinds of plastic bags for cultivation. Fiber containers are also
- popular. They are inexpensive, last several growing seasons and are easy to
- dispose of.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 19 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "When to Plant"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Marijuana growers using only artificial light can start at any time since
- the grower determines the plant's environment and stimulates seasonal
- variations by adjusting the light/darkness periods.
- Gardeners using natural light either as a primary or secondary source
- must take the seasons into account. They plant in the spring - from April
- through June. These plants will be harvested between September and November
- and no artificial light may be needed as long as there is plenty of direct
- sunshine. Supplemental artificial light may help the plants to maturity in
- the fall, when the sun's intensity declines and there are overcast days.
- The angle of the sun's path changes over the season too. Areas may receive
- indirect sun during part of the growing season. In overcast areas, and even
- sunny places receiving direct sunlight, 4-6 hours of supplemental metal
- halide light during the brightest part of the day is all that is needed
- during September/October to help the buds mature. One lamp will cover about
- 100 square feet or an area 10 by 10 feet.
- Growers using natural light are not restricted to one season. It is
- feasible to grow 3 or 4 crops a year using supplemental light. In early
- October, before the plants are harvested, seeds are started in a seperate
- area. Since little room is needed for the first few weeks, they can be
- germinated on a shelf. In addition to natural light, the plants should get
- a minimum of 6 hours of artificial light per day at the rate of about 10
- watts per square foot.
- For fastest growth, the plants should receive 24 hours of light a day.
- Seedlings may receive light only during normal day light hours except that
- they require an interruption of the night cycle so they do not go into the
- flowering stage prematurely. If metal halide lamps are being used, a
- seperate light system should be installed with incandescent or fluorescent
- lights on a timer so that the seedlings do not have a long period of
- uninterrupted darkness. One 60 watt incandescent bulb or one 22 watt
- fluorescent tube is used per square yard (3 by 3 feet). The bulbs can be
- flashed on for a few minutes using a multi-cycle timer during the middle of
- the dark period. Gardeners with large spaces sometimes stagger the timing
- of the night lights.
- Incandescent bulbs are not very effecient, but they provide enough light
- to prevent flowering, they are easy and inexpensive to set up and maintain,
- and they light up almost immediately. In addition, they emit a high
- percentage of red light, which is part of the spectrum used by plants to
- regulate photoperiod responses.. Metal halides require about 10 minutes to
- attain full brightness. Metal halide ballasts wear out faster when they are
- turned on and off a lot, so it is cheaper to flash incandescents.
- In late December, the incandescents are turned off so that they no longer
- interrupt the night cycle. Within a week or two the plants will begin to
- flower. They will be ready to harvest in 6 or 8 weeks.
- At the same time that the incandescents are turned off the winter crop,
- seeds are started for the spring crop. They are kept on the interrupted
- night regimen until late winter, around March 1-10. The plants will begin
- to flower and be ready in late May and early June. The spring crop should
- be planted with short season plants so that they do not revert back to
- vegetative growth as the days get longer. Long season varieties are more
- likely to revert.
- After the flowers are formed, the spring crop plants will revert back to
- vegetative growth. New leaves will appear and the plant will show renewed
- vigor. The plant can be harvested again in the fall, or new seds can be
- germinated for the fall crop.
- One grower reported that he makes full use of his greenhouse. He starts
- his plants indoors in late November and starts the flowering cycle in the
- beginning of Februaru. The plants are ripe by the end of April, then he
- lets the plants go back into vegetative growth for a month and a half. Then
- he starts to shade them again and harvests in late August. Next he puts out
- new, month-old, foot-high plants. He lets them grow under natural light,
- but breaks the darkness cycle using incandescent lights. In mid-September
- he shuts the lights off, and the plants mature in early November.
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 20 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Planting"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Growers usually figure that 1/4 - 1/3 of the seeds they plant reach
- maturity. Usually 40-50% of the plants are male. The best females are
- chosen for continued growth during early growth but after the plants have
- indicated.
- Most fresh seeds have a very high germination rate, usually about 95%.
- However, older seeds (more than 2 or 3 years old) or seeds imported from
- foreign countries where they undergo stress during curing, may not fare so
- well. They have a higher percentage of weak plants and they are subject to
- disease. Sometimes virtually all of the seeds from a batch of imported
- marijuana are dead.
- Intact seeds which are dark brown or grey have the best chance of
- germinating. Seeds which are whitish, light tan or cracked are probably not
- viable. Most guide books suggest that growers plant the largest seeds in a
- batch, but the size of the seed is genetically as well as environmentally
- determined and does not necessarily relate to its germination potential.
- If the seeds are fresh, they can be planted one per container. They may
- be planted in the container in which they are to grow to maturity or in a
- smaller vessel. Some growers find it more convenient to plant the seeds in
- small containers to save space during early growth.
- Seeds with a dubious chance of germination are best started in tissue and
- then placed in pots as they show signs of life. The wet tissue, napkin or
- sponge is placed in a container or on a plate, and is covered with plastic
- wrap. The seeds are check every 12 hours for germination. As soon as the
- root cracks the skin, the seedling is planted with the emerging point down.
- Seeds can also be started in tray pots so that large numbers can be tried
- without using much space.
- Seedlings and cuttings can be placed in the refrigerator - not the
- freezer - to slow down their growth if it is inconvenient to plant at the
- moment. They can be stored in the vegetable crisper of the refrigerator for
- a week or more, in a moistoned plastic bag. The temperature should be kept
- above 40 degrees to prevent cell damage. This does not adversely affect the
- plant's later growth, and, in fact, is an easy way to harden the plants up
- that are placed outdoors later. [pH:I have wondered if the plants were
- grown in the refrigerator all the way through picking, and its offspring
- (from seed) were also grown in such cold temperatures, if future generations
- of the plant would be able to grow, outside, through winter, by itself.]
- Seeds should be sown 1/4 - 1/2 inch deep, covered, and then the medium
- should be patted down. Seeds sown in light soil or planting mixes can be
- sown one inch deep. Some growers treat the seeds with B1 or the rooting
- hormone, indolebutyric acid, which is sold as an ingredient in many rooting
- solutions. Seeds germinated in covered trays or mini-greenhouses grow long,
- splindly stems unless the top is removed as the first seedlings pop the
- soil. The medium must be kept moist.
- One way to make sure that the medium remains moist is to plant the seeds
- in containers or nursery trays which have been modified to use the wick
- system. To modify a tray, nylon cord is run horizontally through holes in
- each of the small growing spaces. The cord should extend downward into a
- leakproof holder. (Trays come with 2 kinds of holders. Some have drainage
- holes and some are solid.) The tray is raised from the holder using a
- couple of pieces of 2x4's running lengthwise which keep tray holders filled
- with water. The tray will remain moist as long as there is water in the
- bottom. If the tray is to be moved, it is placed in cardboard box or over a
- piece of plywood before being filled with water.
- The light is kept on continuously until the seeds germinate. Most seeds
- germinate in 3-14 days. Usually fresh seeds germinate faster than old ones.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 21 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Early Growth"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Once the seeds germinate, the light is kept on for 18-24 hours a day.
- Some growers think that there is no significant difference in growth rates
- between plants growing under 24 hours of light a day (continuous lighting)
- and those growing under an 18 hour regimen. In controlled experiments there
- was a significant difference: the plants get off to a faster start given
- continuous lighting. Some growers cut the light schedule down to conserve
- electricity.
- Plants grown under continuous light which are moved outdoors occasionally
- experience shock. This may be caused by the intense light they receive from
- the sun combined with the shortened day length.
- Another popular lighting regimen starts with continuous light. A week
- after germination the light is cut back one hour so that the regimen
- consists of 23 hours on and one hour off. The following week the lights are
- cut back again, to 22 hours of light and 2 of darkness. Each week
- thereafter, the lights are cut back another hour until the light is on only
- 12 hours a day.
- Whenever a light is to be turned on and off periodically, it is best to
- use a timer to regulate it. The timer is never late, always remembers, and
- never goes on vacation. [pH:and never goes to jail!]
- Plants are at their most vulnerable stage immediately after they
- germinate. They are susceptible to stem rot, which is usually a fungal
- infection and occurs frequently when the medium is too moist and the roots
- do not have access to oxygen. On the other hand, if the medium dries out,
- the plant may be damaged from dehydration.
- Mice, pet birds, dogs and cats have all been noted to have a fondness for
- marijuana sprouts and the young plants. [pH:everything must get stoned!]
- Seedlings given too little light or too warm an environment stretch their
- stems. The long slender shoot subsequently has problems staying upright -
- it becomes top-heavy. These plants should be supported using cotton swabs,
- toothpicks or thin bamboo stakes.
- Most seedlings survive the pitfalls and within a matter of weeks develop
- from seedlings into vigorous young plants. During marijuana's early growth,
- the plant needs little special care. It will have adjusted to its
- environment and grow at the fastest pace the limiting factors allow.
- If the plants are in a soilless mix without additives they should be
- fertilized as soon as they germinate. Plants grown in large containers with
- soil or a mix with nutrients can usually go for several weeks to a month
- with no supplements.
- Within a few weeks the plants grow quite a bit and gardeners thin the
- plants. If possible, this is not done until the plants indicate sex, so
- that the grower has a better idea of how many plants to eliminate. The most
- vigorous, healthy plants are chosen.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 22 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Watering"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Growers using passive hydroponic systems only have to water by adding it
- to the reservoirs, to replenish water lost to evaporation and transpiration.
- Growers using active hydroponic systems, including drop emitters, adjust
- the watering cycle so that the medium never loses its moisture. Mediums for
- active systems are drained well so that the roots come into contact with
- air. Each medium retains a different volume of water. The plant's size and
- growth stage, the temperature, and the humidity also affect the amount of
- water used. Cycles might start at once every six hours of light during the
- early stages and increase as the plants need it.
- Plants growing in soil or soiless mixes should be watered before the soil
- dries out but only after the top layer has lost a bit of its moisture. If
- the mixture is not soggt and drains well, overwatering is not a problem.
- Excess moisture drains.
- Plants have problems with some soils not because they are too wet, but
- because the soils have too find a texture and do not hold air in pockets
- between the particles. As long as a medium allows both air and water to
- penetrate, the roots will remain healthy. If the roots do not have access
- to air, they grow weak and are attacked by bacteria.
- Plant leaves catch dust so it is a good idea to spray the plants every
- 2-4 weeks with a fine spray, letting the water drop off the leaves. Do this
- before the beginning of the light cycle so the leaves dry off completely,
- and the glass of the lights is not hot in case water touches it.
- Some growers spray the leaves weekly with a dilute fertilizer solution.
- The leaf has pores through which the nutrients can be absorbed and utilized.
- They claim that the growth rate is increased. In various tests with legal
- plants, researches have affirmed that plants which are foliar-fed do grow
- faster.
- Once the flowers start forming, the plants should not be sprayed because
- the flowers are susceptible to mold and infections which are promoted by
- excess humidity.
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 23 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Pruning"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- There are probably as many theories about pruning and its effect on crop
- yield as there are cultivators. Pruning theories are complicated by the
- many varieties of marijuana, which have different branching patterns and
- growing habits.
- Indicas tend to grow naturally with little branching. Most of their
- energy is used for the central main bud which may develop to a diameter of 3
- to 4 inches. Branches are short and compact.
- Mexicans, Colombians, and Africans usually grow in a conical pattern
- often likened to a Christmas tree. They develop a large central bud. The
- peripheral buds and branches can also grow quite large.
- Plants regulate their growth patterns using auxins, which are hormones.
- One auxin is produced by the tallest growing tip of the plant. This
- inhibitsother branches from growing as fast. If the top bud is removed, the
- two branches below will grow larger, in effect becoming the main stem. They
- produce the growth-inhibiting auxin; however, they have less of an
- inhibitory effect on the lower branches. [pH:and they could be removed too]
- Growers are often obsessed with yield per plant. This outlook developed
- because of the surreptitious nature of marijuana cultivation. Farmers and
- gardeners can grow only a few plants so they want to get the best possible
- yield from them. Traditional farmers are more concerned with the yield per
- unit of space. Since indoor gardeners have limited space, total yield of
- high quality marijuana should be of more concern than the yield per plant.
- Growers have done experiments showing that some pruning techniques
- effectively increase the yield of some plants. However, the pruned plants
- usually occupy more space than plants which are left unpruned, so that there
- may be no increase in yield per unit of space.
- To make a plant bushy it is pinched (the growing shoot is removed) at the
- second or third set of leaves and again at the sixth, seventh or eigth
- internode. Sometimes the plants are pinched once or twice more. This
- encourages the plants to spread out rather than to grow vertically.
- Plant branching can be controlled by bending instead of cutting. If the
- top branch is bent so that it is lower than the side branches, the side
- shoots will start to grow as if the top branch was cut because the branch
- highest from the ground produces the growth auxin. If the top branch is
- released so that it can grow upward again it starts to dominate again, but
- the side branches still have more growth than they ordinarily would have
- had. Top branches can also be "trained" to grow horizontally so that the
- primary bud is exposed to more light. The bud will grow larger than normal.
- Bamboo stakes, twist-ties and wire can be used for training.
- One grower trained his plants using a technique ordinarily used by grape
- growers. He built a frame made of a single vertical 2x3 and nailed 4 foot
- long 2x1's every 9 inches along its length so that the horizontal boards
- stretched two feet in either direction. Then he trained the branches to the
- frame. Each branch was stretched horizontally and the plant had virtually
- no depth. This increased the number of plants he could grow since each
- plant took less space.
- On the next crop he used the same system with most of his plants but set
- up a chickenwire fence on a frame about 6 inches from one wall. As the
- plants grew he trained them to the fence.
- A grower in Mendocino pinches the plants at the fourth node and then
- allows only four brances to develop. She removes all side shoots. Each
- plant grows four giant buds and takes relatively little space.
- Plants which are only a foot or two tall when they were put into the
- flowering cycle may not have developed extensive branching. They may grow
- into plants with only one bud; the main stem becomes swollen with flowers
- but there is little branching. These plants require only about a square
- foot of floor space. Although their individual yields are low, the plants
- have a good yield-per-space unit. A gardener with larger plants modified
- this technique by trimming off all side shoots and spacing the one-buds
- close together to maximize yield.
- A greenhouse grower grew plants to about three feet and then clipped the
- tops. Each plant developed four stems in a couple of weeks. Then he turned
- the light cycle down to induce flowering.
- A garden in the midwest featured plants which were trained to 5 foot
- tomato trellises (the metal cones). The grower trained the branches around
- the cone and tied them to the support using twist-ties.
- Plants which are several feet tall can also be turned on their sides as
- was discussed in the chapter on Novel Gardens. The plant immediately
- switches its growth pattern so that the stems grow vertically, against the
- gravity and towards the light. [pH:But, in a 0-g space, with equal light
- coming from all sides, which way would the plant grow?]
- Most growers agree that plants should not be clipped once they are in a
- pre-flowering stage. By experience they know that this may seriously
- decrease yield.
- Plants may grow at an uneven pace in the garden. There are several
- reasons for this. The plants may differ genetically and be inclined to grow
- at different rates, or there may be an uneven distribution of light in the
- garden so that some plants receive more energy to fuel their growth. Plants
- in single containers can be moved around the garden to even out the amount
- of light they get and to deal with the problem of height. When the taller
- plants are placed at the periphery of the garden, light is not blocked from
- the shorter ones. Taller plants need not be clipped. Instead, their tops
- can be bent and snapped so that the stem is horizontal near the top. This
- technique is used as far as 2 feet below the top of the stem. The bent tops
- usually need to be supported. It is not hard to tie one end of a bamboo
- stake to the main stem and the other end to the top, so that a triangle is
- formed.
- Contrary to myth, sun leaves should not be removed from the plant except
- late in life when they often yellow. These leaves are little sugar
- factories which turn the light energy into chemical energy which is stored
- and used later. When the leaf is removed, the plant loses a source of
- energy and its rate of growth slows. If you don't believe this, try an
- experiment. Find any type of plant which has two sun leaves opposite each
- other with a small branch growing from either side. Remove one of the
- leaves and see which side branch develops faster.
-
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 24 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Pests"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- When plants are grown outdoors, pests and insects are ever-present but
- most of the time they are kept in check by the forces of nature. The wind,
- rain, changes in temperature, predators and diseases work as a system of
- checks and balances to keep the populations down despite a phenomenally high
- theoretical reproductive capacity.
- Indoors, invading plant pests discover an ideal environment, with few of
- the hazards they would find outdoors and with an abundance of food. Within
- a few weeks of invasion the implications of the pests' theoretical
- multiplication rate are evident and the plants may suffer the ravages of the
- attack. For this reason, any pest invasion is treated very seriously and
- quickly.
- Every insect invasion to the garden has a cause. Most of the time, the
- pests were carried into the garden by the gardener. Less frequently, pests
- enter through the windows, cracks, or through the ventilation system.
- Cautious growers never go into the indoor garden after working outdoors or
- being in an outdoor garden. They never work on healthy plants after being
- around or working on infected ones. In some commercial greenhouses, workers
- change clothing in a dressing room before entering from outside.
- One grower keeps a plastic dishpan filled with salt water at the entrance
- to his grow room. As he enters the room he dips the soles of each shoe in
- the water. This kills any pests which might be riding on the undersides of
- his shoes.
- To get a close look at insects, it is a good idea to get a photographer's
- loop magnifying glass or a portable low-power microscope. Even the most
- inexpensive ones are adequate.
- There are six pests that are most likely to attack marijuana indoors:
- aphids, mealybugs, mites, whiteflies, scale, and caterpillars. A few others
- sometimes invade greenhouses. These include caterpillars, cutworms,
- grasshoppers and leafhoppers.
-
- APHIDS
-
- Aphids are usually found on the undersides of leaves and on stems, though
- they are sometimes found on the leaf tops. The adults are about 1/32 to
- 1/16 of an inch long and are oval, almost egg shaped. They have two
- protrusions from their rear which look like pipes and may or may not have
- wings. They are usually found in dense colonies with an adult surrounded by
- a cluster of young. They are usually pale green or yellow, but sometimes
- are brown, black or red. They molt leaving a white shell. They secrete
- "honeydew" which is shiny and sticky and is found on infested foliage.
- Honeydew isa concentrate of the sugars the animal has sucked out of the
- plant and discarded in its search for protein. Aphids are frequently found
- together with ants which farm them for their honeydew by carrying them from
- plant to plant.
- Infested plants weaken from the insects' constant sucking of sap which
- they eat by penetrating the deep tissue. Older leaves curl and younger ones
- grow deformed. Mold sometimes forms on the honeydew. Within weeks the
- plant may wither. Aphids are carriers of molds and viruses.
- Indoors, aphids reproduce parthenogenetically; that is, all the insects
- are females and they can reproduce without being fertilized. They bear live
- young, which may actually carry embryos of their own before they are born.
- They can reproduce when they are 6 days old.
- Luckily, aphids are not difficult to control. Action is taken at the
- first sign of infection. First, the garden is checked for ants. Any
- colonies are eliminated using ant bait, ant stakes or boric acid.
- Then all visible aphids are wiped off the plants using a sponge and soapy
- water, a soapy water spray or insecticide. A soapy water spray is made by
- mixing 1.5 tablespoons Ivory Snow Flakes or any other soap without detergent
- in a gallon of water. Some growers reported success using Dr. Bronner's
- Eucalyptus or Mint liquid soaps (these are often found in health food
- stores) at the rate of 1 tablespoon per gallon. This will eliminate most of
- the pests so that the grower has some breathing space. However, even the
- most thorough spraying or sponging does not eliminate all of the pests, and
- since they reproduce parthenogenetically, even one remaining insect can
- restart the colony.
- If the plants are not flowering, then spray can be used every 2 or 3 days
- for several weeks. Thorough sprayings may eventually destroy the colony.
- They certainly keep it in check.
- Another convenient spray is available commercially. Pyrethrum is a
- natural insecticide found in chrysanthemum-family plants. It has not been
- found harmful to warm-blooded animals but is toxic to aphids, among other
- insects. Pyrethrum may be purchased as a powder, a liquid concentrate, in a
- pump or aerosal spray. Usually growers with small gardens choose the
- aerosols for convenience, while those with large gardens find the
- concentrates or powders much less expensive. [pH:I wonder what, if
- anything, adding this to the water for the plant would do to the aphids? If
- it kills them, this would be a good way to kill them if the plants are
- flowering.]
- Some benign insects like to eat aphids and are convenient to use in a
- greenhouse or grow-room situation. Ladybugs and green lacewings are
- predators which eat aphids. They can be purchased commercially from
- insectiaries. These insects also go through a rapid lifecycle and may eat
- hundreds of aphids as they grow to adults. The insects come with
- instructions for their use.
- People are sometimes a little queasy about bringing beneficial insects
- indoors because they are afraid they will escape into unwanted areas.
- However, for the most part these insects stay where they belong as long as
- there is food for them to eat. Adult beneficials sometimes fly directly
- into metal halide lamps and die instantly. One grower placed a glass
- reflector around his lamps. The trick is to get the adult beneficials to
- lay eggs because the predators are most voracious during their immature
- stages. Given enough food (aphids) this presents no problem. Once the
- predators become established they keep the pest population at a negligible
- level, but never eliminate their source of food.
-
- MEALYBUGS
-
- Mealybugs are light-colored insects which exude a white, waxy
- cotton-looking substance in which they nestle or which covers their body.
- They are usually found on the undersides of the leaves and in the joints
- between the leaves and stems. The adults are from 1/16 to 1/8 inch long.
- They suck juices from the plant and exude honeydew. Their breeding rate is
- much slower than many other pests; a generation takes a month or more.
- A small mealybug infection may be eliminated by using a sponge to wipe
- the creatures off the plants. They can also be destroyed using a cotton
- swab dabbed in alcohol, which kills them instantly. More serious
- infestations may be controlled using a soapy water solution or pyrethrum.
- As well as eating aphids, green lacewings also eat mealybugs.
-
- MITES
-
- Mites are the most dangerous pest that can enter a garden. They are not
- insects, but an arachnid, which is the class of animals that include
- spiders. Mites are tiny and may not be noticed until they have developed
- into a serious infestation. There are many species of mites. However the
- one most likely to attack the garden is the 2 spotted mite, which has two
- spots on its back which can be seen under a magnifying glass.
- The first indication that a grower may have mites is seeing pinpoint
- yellow spots on fan leaves. These spots are located above the points where
- the mites have pierced the tissue to suck out the plant juices. Mites are
- very small, measuring only 3-6 thousandths of an inch. They look like small
- dots colored black, red or brown. Mites' maturity and reproductive rates
- are affected by temperature. A female lays about 100 eggs during her
- lifetime, but at 60 degrees she produces 20 offspring, at 70 degrees she and
- her offspring number 13,000 and at 80 degrees she represents a potential
- 13,000,000 individuals over a single month. Under ideal conditions mites
- reproduce a week after hatching. [pH:I have friends who have lost entire
- plants to these things.]
- As the mite population rises, the plants weaken. Infested leaves curl
- under and spider-like webbing is spun which covers the plants and is used by
- the pests to move from plant to plant. Mites also walk down stems, across
- medium and across dry space in search of new plants to colonize. [pH:To
-
- <POSSIBLE DATA LOSS>
-
- the burrow holes and then use a wire or flexible tool to squash the insect
- in its path. The stems can also be split with a sharp, clean knife or razor
- and then after the pest is killed the stem is sealed with grafting wax and
- bound with tape and reinforced with a brace.
-
-
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 25 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Flowering"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Earlier in this series (Part 3), we described how marijuana determines
- when it should flower. It senses the onset of "Fall" by measuring the
- number of hours of uninterrupted darkness. When the plant senses a period
- of uninterrupted darkness long enough each evening, it triggers into
- flowering.
- The period of darkness required varies by variety. Equatorial varieties
- need a longer period of darkness than indica or Southern African varieties
- because the equatorial growing season is longer and equatorial plants have
- shorter days. Equatorial sativas flower when the dark cycle increases to 12
- hours or more. Most indicas flower at between 12 to 16 hours of light, 8 to
- 12 hours of uninterrupted darkness.
- Male marijuana plants flower before the females and are only partially
- light-sensitive. In some varieties the males seem to flower after a few
- months of growth, regardless of lighting conditions.
- Since female marijuana flowering is regulated by light, a cultivator
- growing under lights can put the garden into flowering with the flick of the
- timer. Once the plants start to bloom, they will grow another foot or two
- in height. The plants should be set into flowering before they get too
- tall.
- Growers use several lighting regimens to start the plants flowering.
- Growers using continuous light or another long day cycle can cut the light
- back to flowering cycle with no intermediate steps. The plants do not
- suffer from shock or exhibit unusual growth. Some growers do introduce the
- cycle more gently, cutting the light back to flowering cycle over several
- weeks.
- After 4 to 5 weeks of heavy flowering, some growers set the light back
- another hour to simulate the shortening season. Growers cut the light back
- another hour after another month. This may be especially helpful in
- finishing some tropical varieties, which do not reach maturity in their
- native lands until the middle of the short day season (there is no winter in
- the tropics).
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 26 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Sinsemilla and Sexing"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- The word "sinsemilla" is derived from the two Spanish words "sin" and
- "semilla" meaning respectively "without" and "seed". Connoisseurs prize
- sinsemilla partly because the marijuana has a greater potency and a more
- intense aroma than seeded marijuana, and partly because of its enhanced
- appearance.
- In order for the flowers to ripen unseeded, they must remain unpollinated
- (unfertilized). Male and female flowers usually appear on seperate plants.
- The males are removed from the space as soon as they are recognized. This
- should be done early in the male plants' development, before any large
- flower clusters appear. Even a single open flower cluster can release enough
- pollen to fertilize thousands of female flowers.
- Males can be detected early by carefully examining the space where the
- leaf joins the stem (internode). Before the plant begins to develop flower
- clusters, a single male or female flower will sometimes grow in the
- internode. A male flower will have what looks like a bulb growing from a
- thin stem, and at the bulb's end there will be a curved protrusion that
- looks something like a little bent finger. A female flower will usually
- have two antennae-like protrusions jutting out. [pH:They look kinda like
- slugs or snails] Sometimes a sexually indistinguishable flower appears.
- The females' leaves begin to grow closer together, forming a strong stem
- which will hold the clusters of flowers and later the ripening seed.
- Any plants which have not indicated are watched closely, and the females
- are watched for any signs of hermaphrodites. These plants are primarily
- female but they produce some fertile male flowers. This may consist of
- only a few clusters, an entire branch, or, occasionally, males throughout
- the plant. These plants are dangerous in any sinsemilla garden. Even a
- small cluster of flowers can ruin entire colas of buds. Either the male
- flowers should be removed and the plant checked daily, or the plant should
- be removed from the garden, which is the safest course of action. [pH:Use
- it for seed.]
- There are several methods used to sex plants early. Since marijuana
- flowering is regulated by the number of hours of uninterrupted darkness, it
- is easy to manipulate the plant's flowering cycle. Young plants can be
- forced to indicate by putting them under a long night regimen. The plants
- will begin to indicate within a few days and after 10 days, fast growing
- plants should have clearly defined flowers. Once the plants indicate, the
- males can be seperated from the females, and the garden can be returned to
- the vegetative growth cycle simply by changing the light regimen back to the
- long day/short night.
- Putting the plants through an abbreviated flowering cycle sets them back
- several weeks. First, their growth is stopped and then it takes them some
- time to start growing again. Some growers feel that the plants lose a bit
- of vigor in the process. To eliminate stresses in the garden, a clone can
- be taken of each plant.
- The clones should be tagged to denote plant of origin and then placed in
- water or rooting medium under a long night/short day environment. The
- clones will have the same sex as its clone parent, so the clone parent's sex
- is determined before the plant is out of the vegetative stage. The female
- clones can be continued under the flowering regimen and will provide a taste
- of the clone-parent's future buds. [pH:Flowering clones being an excellent
- way to keep a small stash while the plants are growing]
- Within a few days of the change in the light regimen to a long night, the
- plants begin to show changes in their growth patterns. First, their rate of
- growth, which might be as much as 2 inches a day during the previous cycle,
- slows and stops. Next the plants begin to differentiate. The males
- elongate upon ripening so that their flower sacks, which contain copious
- amounts of pollen, tower above the females. Marijuana is normally
- wind-pollinated.
- The females start to grow stocky stems with shorter nodes between the
- leaves. The number of fingers on the leaves decreases and the plant may
- revert from opposite leaves to a pattern of leaves alternating on the stem.
- Within a few weeks, large numbers of pistils (the white antennae) will
- form along the stem and on the tops of the branches. If the flowers are
- fertilized, the pistils will start to dry up, beginning at the tips. Each
- fertilized flower produces a seed. Such formation, which commences upon
- fertilization, is apparent by the third day. The ovary at the base of the
- pistil swells as the new seed grows inside of it.
- As long as most flowers remain unfertilized, the plant continues to
- produce new flowers. The clusters get thick with the unfertilized flowers
- over a period of several weeks. Then the flowering pattern begins to
- change. The pistils begin to wither, similar to the way pistils of
- fertilized flowers do and they begin to dry while at the same time changing
- color. Next, the calyx (ovary) begins to swell. There is no seed
- developing inside the calyx; it is a sort of false pregnancy. When the
- calyx has swelled, the cluster or cola is ripe and ready to be picked.
- The pistil's color is a factor of genetics and temperature. Some plants,
- including many indicas, naturally develop a purplish color. Many indicas
- and most sativas develop a red color. However, the color may change to
- purple or become more pronounced if the roots are subjected to a cool
- environment, below 55 degrees.
- The growing flowers develop glands over their outer surfaces. Glands
- also develop along the small leaf parts surrounding the flower. These are
- unlike the glands found on the immature plant, the sun leaves, and the stem.
- The earlier glands were either connected directly to the plant, usually
- along the stem or had a small one-celled stalk connected to the head which
- filled with cannabinoids. The new glands have a longer stem which supports
- a larger head. The head is a membrane that fills with cannabinoids. The
- analogs of THC produced in the different types of glands may vary.
- When the gland first appears the head is small but it begins to swell and
- looks like it might burst. Given any stress it will. Usually the head is
- filled as the plants go into the last stage of flowering, as the ovaries
- begin to swell. This is usually when experienced growers pick the buds.
-
- Researchers, scientists, and gardeners have debated the purpose that THC
- serves to the plant. THC and the water-soluble compounds which impart the
- taste and aroma to the flowers act as an anti-bacterial agent, and repel
- some insects. They also repel most other animals including mammals and
- birds. (Remember, we are talking about a mature plant, heavy with resin.)
- This is not uncommon in plants. To assure that the seed is viable and not
- destroyed to thwart predators. Once the seed matures, it is palatable to
- these creatures. This is one of the ways that the plant spreads its
- populations without human help. Animals and birds eat the seeds, an
- occasional seed passes out the animal's system unharmed, allowing the
- species to colonize a new location.
- Once the calyx swells, the glands begin to change color. The THC in the
- head was previously a clear liquid. When the calyx is getting a little
- overripe, the gland head tints an amber shade. This indicates that the THC
- is beginning to degrade into two other cannabinoids, CBL or CBN, which are
- not nearly as powerful as THC.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 27 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Advanced Flowering"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- [pH:This chapter has 21 pages of charts and diagrams that I did not enter,
- that are very informative and highly useful. If you want them, buy the
- book.]
-
- In Part 25 (Flowering), marijuana's photoperiod response was described.
- Most varieties of cannabis flower in response to changes in the light cycle.
- This is a foolproof method for a plant to determine when to flower when it
- is adapted to a particular location. Every year the ratio of dark to light
- remains the same at a particular date. Scientists think that plants measure
- the number of hours of darkness by producing a hormone, tentatively named
- florigen. This hormone has not actually been discovered. The theory is
- that when the level of this hormone reaches a critical level, the plant goes
- into its reproductive mode.
- Through simple experimentation, we know some interesting things about
- this plant response. It is a localized response by the plant. This was
- discovered by shading one branch of a plant but leaving the rest of it
- without a daily dark period. Only the branch that was shaded flowered.
- (This is a viable technique to use to sex plants).
- Researchers think thatthe hormone is produced by the plant continuously.
- However, it is destroyed or metabolized by an enzyme or hormone which is
- produced only in the presence of light. Under natural conditions, the
- critical level builds up only with the onset of long nights in the autumn.
- When the dark cycle is interrupted by light, even for a few minutes or less,
- the florigen is destroyed by the plant and the plant starts the buildup to
- the critical level over again.
- The response to different light cycles is a graduated one. Plants that
- initiate flowering at one light/darkness routine flower more heavily when
- the amount of darkness is increased. This response is more pronounced on
- plants originating from a higher latitude where the light cycle changes
- more.
- Chrysanthemums are also long night-flowering plants, and their growth
- patterns have been studied extensively for use by the greenhouse industry.
- Researchers found that the largest flowers with the highest total weight
- were grown when the dark cycle routine was provided each night. When the
- plants were shaded 6 nights a week, there was a slight diminution of flower
- size and total weight. With each additional unshaded night, flower size and
- weight dropped. [pH:Now, you are probably thinking "That doesn't make one
- damned bit of sense!" and you are correct. I don't know what Ed was
- thinking in this instance, so I won't bother to correct THIS error, but if
- one reads it, if the plants are shaded for 6 nights a week, they get
- smaller. If you "unshade" them, they also get smaller. You're screwed
- either way, apparently.]
- Cannabis is one of the most widespread plants. It is naturalized
- everywhere from the equator to the arctic. (Private cannabis gardens have
- also been documented as being grown by scientists stationed at outposts in
- the Antarctic - it's not illegal there since no country has sovreignty).
- The plant has developed many variations on the photoperiod response to
- adjust to different climactic and latitudinal conditions.
- Female plants from equatorial or sub-equatorial zones such as Colombia,
- southern Mexico, central Africa, and south India are absolute
- photo-determinate (APD). These plants are acclimated to latitudes in which
- there is little variation in the light cycle throughout the year. As long
- as the dark period falls below a minimum trigger period, the plant remains
- in the vegetative growth cycle. This can go on for years under continuous
- light conditions. When the dark period lengthens to a trigger point, the
- plant changes its growth pattern to sexual development. If the dark period
- falls below the trigger level when the plants are flowering, the plants
- easily revert back to vegetative growth.
- APD plants are good candidates to flower and regenerate. Since they
- respond to the light cycle in a relatively simple way, irregular or
- interrupted cycles alter growth significantly. Buds are smaller, leafier,
- fluffier, looser, and may run. They look a bit like low-light flowers.
- Flower size can be increased by allowing the plants to ripen fully, then
- placing them in a continuous light regimen for a few days. Flowering is
- triggers again and the plants produce new clusters of flowers. [pH:Perhaps
- Ed didn't write this chapter, because it is repeating too much stuff he's
- already said, and besides: That isn't going to increase the flower SIZE, it
- will increase the amount harvested.]
- Some cannabis varieties are "relative photoperiod determinate" (RPD).
- These plants have a trigger that they respond to under normal growing
- conditions, but when they receive an unusual light regimen, they respond to
- the change in the light conditions in unusual ways. For example, an early
- flowering indica normally triggers at 10 hours of darkness, but if it is
- grown under continuous light and then the darkness cycle is increased to 8
- hours, the plant triggers. Once these plants are triggered, the light cycle
- has less affect upon them than upon the APDs. The developing flowers are
- not as sensitive to occasional interruption of the darkness cycle.
- RPD varieties include the mid- and high-range latitude-adapted plants
- including Moroccans and southern Africans, early indicas, commercial hemp
- and hybrids developed for early harvest (September or earlier).
- RPD varieties are harder to manipulate using the light cycle. Plants
- placed into flowering do not revert to vegetative growth as easily as APD
- varieties. [pH:Perhaps I'm in a bad mood, but does he have to keep fucking
- repeating himself? This is annoying as HELL!] The plants are harder to
- regenerate. Light stress promotes hermaphroditism in these varieties. They
- are harder to clone; they take longer and have a lower success rate.
- Most males and some extreme northern varieties including the ruderalis
- strains fall into a third category which is not photosensitive at all. Both
- age and development seem to play a role in determining when these plants
- flower. For example, a Hungarian ruderalis developed flowers under
- continuous light after 8 weeks. Most varieties of males indicate under
- continuous light after 3-9 months. Thais and some equatorial sativa males
- are exceptions and will not flower until the dark period is increased.
- Under 18 hours of light, males indicate sooner than under continuous light.
- Cold may hasten sexual expression but not flower development of some
- northern varieties.
- Some varieties, especially indicas, respond to unnatural light cycles by
- showing photo-period response disorder. Genetic females turn hermaphroditic
- when exposed to long dark periods during early growth.
-
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 28 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Breeding"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Humans have been breeding marijuana informally for thousands of years.
- The first farmers chose seeds from the best plants. Over many generations
- the plant was differentiated into varieties which had different uses and
- thrived under various environmental conditions.
- Scientific breeding did not begin until Gregor Mendel's experiments on
- inherited characteristics were discovered. Mendel crossed peas with
- differing characteristics and found that the offspring plants inherited
- traits from their parents in a logical, predictable, statistical way.
- [pH:You ever wonder what possesses these people to do shit like that? Don't
- they have lives to lead or something?]
- Today we know that each cell contains a set of chemical blueprints
- regarding every aspect of its existence. These chemical codes are called
- chromosomes and they consist of long double strands of sugar which have
- "bases" consisting of one of four amino acids. Sets of three of these amino
- acid bases form genes which are "read" by structures in the cell and direct
- it in its life processes.
- Chromosomes are found in pairs in most cells. Half of each pair of
- chromosomes is contributed by the male through pollen and half by the
- female. Marijuana has 10 pairs or 20 chromosomes. Each chromosome's genes
- are lined up in a specific order. The other member of the pair has a
- corresponding gene in the same location. Sometimes, a single gene is
- responsible for a characteristic. In other cases, several genes are
- responsible, often in a complex series of reactions.
- There has been very little formal genetic work on marijuana. Almost all
- of the research is the result of observation by cultivators. However, the
- cell and its chromosomes are easily observed using a high-powered
- microscope. Even an inexpensive instrument allows one to see the
- chromosomes during mitosis (cell division). The chromosomes line up in
- pairs and then reproduce themselves as the cell splits into two. When the
- reproductive cells are produced, the pairs of chromosomes split and only one
- chromosome of each pair goes into each reproductive cell. (Photographs can
- be taken with the aid of a 35 mm SLR camera and an inexpensive adapter
- tube.)
- About 2% of the time, the genes "jump" from one member of the pair of
- chromosomes to the other. This is a significant fact in breeding because it
- gives individual chromosomes a means of changing information regarding the
- characteristics for which they are coded.
- Breeding would be a relatively simple task if only one trait or
- characteristic were involved. However there are many factors to consider
- when choosing plants for breeding. These include:potency, taste, aroma,
- color, maturation time, yield, height, branching habits, adaption to
- low-light conditions, resistance to pests or diseases, leaf drop at
- maturity, and sterility.
- When a plant "breeds true" it means that most of the corresponding genes
- on each of the pairs of chromosomes of the 10 pairs have the same
- information. However, plants of different varieties which are crossed are
- hybrids, and many of the corresponding genes on the two sets of chromosomes
- have information which is in conflict. For instance, the first generation
- cross (an F1 hybrid) may contain genes from one parent programmed for tall
- plants and genes from the other parent programmed for short stature. In
- this case the plants all have approximately the same height, intermediate
- between the two parents. When two F1 hybrids are crossed, however, the
- plants are either tall, intermediate, or short. The reason is that some of
- the plants have genes for tallness, some for shortness and others for both.
- Many of the important characteristics of marijuana seem to be coded for
- "partial dominance" as was just described. Aroma, taste, and potency seem
- to fall into this category. When more than one gene is involved, there can
- be enormous numbers of possible combinations.
- Some characteristics are coded on genes which are either dominant or
- recessive. According to Robert Connell Clarke, author of Marijuana Botany,
- tall height, unwebbed leaves, green rather than purple coloring on calyxes
- (seed bracts), and large-size seeds are all dominant genes. A cross between
- two plants with conflicting genes would result in the F1 generation all
- showing the dominant trait. A cross between two F1 plants results in a
- majority of the plants indicating the dominant trait and onlt a few, those
- without the dominant gene on either chromosome, indicating the information
- found on the recessive gene.
- It is difficult for the hobbyist or grower to istitute a scientific
- breeding program because thousands of plants must be grown to find one
- specimen which meets ideal breeding requirements. Growers have a limited
- amount of space to devote to the plants and thus have trouble sorting out
- the crosses. Cultivators can select the best plants in the garden for
- breeding. Sometimes a plant has one outstanding characteristic but is
- unexceptional in other respects. This characteristic can be introduced into
- the breeding pool and then the undesirable traits can be "sorted out".
- Marijuana is especially difficult to breed scientifically because half
- the plants, those bearing pollen, carry genetic information for hidden
- factors. An observer has few means of judging the genetic potential of male
- plants regarding yield, bud structure, and even potency. There is some
- correlation between the male's potency and that of its daughters. One way
- to solve this problem is to induce male flowers on female plants. Then the
- characteristics of both parents are known and all the resulting plants have
- only female chromosomes.
- As in humans, gender in cannabis is determined by the "X" and "Y"
- chromosomes. The female has two X chromosomes and the male has one X and
- one Y. When the male plant produces pollen, half of the reproductive cells
- receive X and half Y. However, when the male flowers are artificially
- induced in female plants, the pollen contains only X chromosomes, the only
- sex chromosomes the female plant has. All the resulting seeds contain two X
- chromosomes, one from each parent.
- To induce male flowers in a female, the plants are sprayed with a
- gibberellic acid or watered with an aspirin/water solution.
- Gibberellic acid is a plant hormone originally isolated from
- mold-infested rice. Symptoms of the infection include extraordinary
- vertical growth. Gibberellic acid affects plants in a variety of ways. In
- marijuana, it cases extension of all stems on which it is sprayed, and if
- used before flowers develop, it occasionally induces a "sex reversal" in
- females: male flowers develop on sprayed areas. The plant's genetic
- structure remains the same, however, the sex characteristics are altered.
- In a general way this is similar to a sex change operation; the genetic
- information contains information for one sex, but the hormones which are
- introduced by the pill or injection artificially induce physiological
- changes in the body, including development of the other sex's sexual
- characteristics.
- Several correspondents have described the results of adding aspirin to
- their water. One grower used two aspirin in a gallon of water when the
- plants were in their third week of flowering. He said that the plants grew
- thousansd of pollen sacs which contained fertile pollen.
- The most methodical way to breed marijuana using these substances is to
- allow the plants to flower after taking several clones from each plant.
- Once the plants are harvested, cured and testing, the cuttings of all except
- those plants selected as the best for breeding are eliminated. When the
- plants are large enough to produce adequate amounts of seed for the
- breeder's purposes, some of the plants are kept as females, and male flowers
- induced in others. Then the plants are bred.
- The first step involves gathering the pollen. Since cannabis is usually
- wind-pollinated, it produces an abundance of pollen which floats easily in
- the air. The male plants are placed in a seperate draft-free location and
- the pollen drops onto unprinted paper placed underneath the plant. However,
- if there are several plants in the same room, the different plants' pollen
- may become contaminated with each other. If the plants are bent or turned
- on their sides so that the pollen has to drop through less air, more pollen
- collects. Plants placed in a cardboard box are even less susceptible to
- draft.
- Some growers collect pollen by cutting the flower spikes off the plants
- just as the flowers are to open. These spikes are placed in a paper bag so
- no pollen is lost. Pollen can also be collected by placing a white paper
- bag around flower spikes. White paper is used so that light rays are
- reflected rather than absorbed by the bag and turned into heat, which may
- damage the plant. Non-coated parchment paper breathe and eliminates
- humidity problems.
- Once the pollen is collected, the female flowers are fertilized. (If
- pollen is scarce, it is diluted 10-100 parts by weight with flour).
- Pollination can be accomplished simply by placing a bag filled with pollen
- around a bud then shaking it. The pollen settles for a day or two and then
- is removed. Another method is to "paint" the pollen onto the female flowers
- using a small watercolor brush. [pH:Painting HAPPY marijuana plants!] One
- grower insists that it is easiest to pollinate using your fingers.
- The best time to pollinate marijuana is when the flowers are well
- developed but still fresh, and have gone through several stages of growth
- and filling out.
- Breeding is a very detailed subject and this is just a cursory discussion
- of it. For more information, I recommend the book, Marijuana Botany by R.C.
- Clarke. [pH:Next on my list]
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 29 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Harvesting"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Female marijuana goes through several stages of flowering. First a few
- flowers appear. Then new flowers develop around the first ones. Flowers
- also form at each leaf node along the branches and main stem. The buds
- start to fill out so that the cluster becomes thick with pistils (the little
- antennae) reaching out for pollen. The pistils are white, or sometimes
- shaded pink or lavender. They look fresh and moist.
- Some of the pistils begin to wither and turn red, purple, or even a light
- brown. Just as the cluster looks like it's finished, a new wave of flower
- growth appears, usually concentrated in a relatively bare spot. Successive
- waves of flowers may appear for weeks.
- The flowers close, and the calyxes start to swell. This is a false seed
- pof; the flowers have not been fertilized and no seed can develop. These
- pods are totally covered with resin glands. At maturity the glands should
- sparkle like individual jewels in bright light. [pH:A thousand points of
- light! Bush was on[to] something!] The individual glands should appear
- clear under magnification. When the glands turn amber, the buds should be
- harvested.
- No bud should be picked before its time. Plants and varieties differ as
- to maturation pattern. Some plants mature all at once, so that the whole
- plant can be picked. Other varieties mature from the top down. One
- respected researcher claimed "Most plants I've had mature bottom to top.
- The main bud was the last to finish." Under lights, however, the top buds
- mature first most of the time. Next, the buds nearest the top and so on.
- The buds on the outside of the branch are likely to mature faster than inner
- buds. It may take a month before the plant is totally picked. Picking the
- plant a little at a time allows previously shaded portions of the plant to
- receive light and grow.
-
- A HARVEST PROBLEM
-
- Some equatorial varieties need so much light to mature properly that it
- is virtually impossible to supply the intensity using artificial light as
- the only source. These plants grow flowers but the growth is loose and the
- flowers take months to ripen. Sometimes the flowers "run". They grow very
- sparsely along the stem instead of forming tight clusters. Increasing the
- amount of light helps. One grower said that lowering the temperature in the
- grow room encourages the plants to develop more compact growth.
- Although these equatorial buds may not look great, and have less
- commercial value, they may still be extremely potent and be genetically
- coded for the soaring sativa high.
- Usually, indoor flowers are not as compact as outdoor grown flowers.
- They are every bit as poten though, perhaps more potent. Outdoors, plants
- are subject to a harsh environment. Wind, rain, animals passing through,
- plant and animal droppings all take their toll on THC glands. They are
- punctured, rubbed off or even washed away. Indoors, plants are living in a
- friendlier environment and almost all of the glands produced remain on the
- plant. The more glands present, the stronger the grass.
-
- MOLD
-
- Dense buds are sometimes attacked by molds. These fast-growing,
- non-green plants grow from spores which float in the air. They start to
- grow when they come in contact with a conducive environment: high humidity,
- low light and temperatures in the 60's. These conditions are most likely to
- occur outdoors or ina greenhouse during harvest season, when the
- temperatures are lower than during the summer and when there is less light
- and higher humidity from the dense foliage. Any moisture or wetness is
- easily trapped in the buds and the molds grow quickly, turning and beautiful
- bug into a mush or slime overnight.
- Indoors, molds also occur during harvest season, usually due to low light
- conditions and too high a humidity.
- There are several things that can be done to prevent molds, and to limit
- the damage that they do. Molds are much less likely to grow when the
- temperature is above their ideal conditions. By keeping the space in the
- high 70's, their growth may be prevented. Since the spores float in the
- air, they can be precipitated using a negative ion generator. This means
- that there are fewer agents to create infections. Lowering the humidity by
- using a dehumidifier or air vent stops the growth.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 30 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Curing and Manicuring"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- When a bud is picked, many of its metabolic processes continue for a
- while. The cells begin to convert carbohydrates back to sugars and break
- down some of the pigments. Chlorophyll is one of the pigments affected.
- Some of it is metabolized and the bud appears a lighter green than when it
- was first picked. Some of the other pigments will show through then, giving
- the bud a red, purple, or cream color.
- To continue to cure, the leaves need to be dried slowly so that moisture
- remains in the cells. They stay alive and continue life processes. On the
- other hand, if the curing process takes too long, mold may form on the buds.
- Small amounts of marijuana dissipate their water quickly in an open room
- because the relative humidity of the air in houses is usually dry. A paper
- bag can be used to conserve water. The bag should be opened and aired twice
- a day. In areas with high humidity or when it is rainy, there is enough
- moisture in the air to let the buds dry in the open air.
- Larger amounts are cured in areas with more air circulation - an attic or
- basement or a dark room will do. A fan may be needed to increase
- circulation. Since all of the vegetation is contributing moisture to the
- air, ventilation is needed to remove it. Rooms that are too moist are
- conducive to mold. If mold appears, increase the heat in the room to 80
- degrees, so that the air can absorb more water.
- Whole plants can be hung upside down but it is much easier to hang
- branches cut in 1-2 foot lengths. These can be hung along lines, laid on
- trays or placed on shelves. It is easy to hang buds using clothespins or
- twist-ties.
- Some growers don't mind a little more chlorophyll taste and would rather
- dry the buds quickly. If the space has low humidity and is warm, the plants
- will dry fast. One grower placed buds in a microwave oven for 30 seconds or
- more on high power so that some of the moisture was removed, then let them
- dry normally. He said it reduced drying time by 50%. Microwaves kill
- seeds, so that buds containing desired seed should not be microwaved.
- Food dehydrators can come in handy, too. They never get very hot so
- little THC is destroyed, yet their warmth promotes quick drying. Some
- growers let the plants dry naturally for a few days and then finish them off
- in a food dryer.
- If plants begin to mold, they should be dried immediately before the
- infection can spread. Mold is contained by keeping infected plants
- seperated from others. This should always be done because of latent spores.
- Drying in an oven is not recommended. Getting the timing wrong or
- forgetting the buds for a few minutes can spell disaster. A vegetable
- dehydrator serves the purpose much better because it has relatively low
- maximum temperatures and will not burn the buds.
- While the plants are drying, the large leaves can be removed using
- scissors, a knife, fingernails, or a clipper. It is harder and takes longer
- to manicure when the plants are wet.
- The best time to manicure is when the plants are near dry. When the
- plants are wet they are difficult to clip. When they are dry many of the
- glands fall off as the bud is handled. When the plants still have some
- moisture, the glands are more likely to stay attached to the plant.
- Manicuring is easier right after picking because the leaves are still
- turgid. Growers sometimes manicure while the plants are still standing.
- The plants are in a convenient position and there seems to be less chance of
- damage to the bud.
- Buds which are too close can be pressed together when they are still wet.
- They will dry in the position they hold. Rolling them gently between one's
- hands shapes them.
- Plenty of light must be used manicuring the buds so that the grower can
- see clearly exactly what he is doing. A good overhead light as well as a
- table or floor lamp will do as long as it is bright. A directional light
- such as an office or typewriter lamp is ideal.
- To manicure, the large sun leaves outisde of the bud area are removed.
- The smaller multi-fingered leaves are removed next. The buds should now
- appear almost naked, except for some single fingered leaves sticking out
- from between the flowers. Rather than removing these leaves entirely, they
- are clipped down to the circumference of the flowers, so that the ends of
- the leaf do not stick out.
- Once the bud has dried, it should be packed in an airtight, lighttight
- container. Buds which are packed moist are likely to mold. One grower left
- some moisture on the buds, packed them in food sealers, and then microwaved
- them to kill the mold. A bud should be left undisturbed until it is to be
- smoked. Every time it is moved, unpacked, or handled, some of the resin
- glands fall off. The glands can be seen cascading through the air whenever a
- is handled roughly.
- Sun leaves are unsuitable for smoking except through a waterpipe. The
- leaves can be prepared for smoking by soaking them in water for several
- hours and then rinsing the leaves. The water dissolves many of the pigments
- and resins including much of the chlorophyll, but the THC remains on the
- leaves. The water is dumped and then the leaves are dried. They smoke much
- smoother than they did originally. They can also be used in cooking, in
- brewing or the THC they hold canbe removed and concentrated.
- The smaller leaves which were trimmed from the buds, including single
- finger leaves and trimming, are quite potent but they do not smoke that
- smoothly. Trim can also be smoked in a waterpipe or soaked in water.
- The buds are usually saved for smoking. The quality of the bud improves
- for several weeks after it has dried. The THC acid loses its water molecule
- and becomes psychoactive. Once the bud is fairly dry, the evaporation can
- be speeded up by keeping the bud in a warm place for a few hours or by using
- a microwave oven.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 31 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Regeneration"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- After the marijuana plant has ripened and the flowers havr reached full
- maturity, it still responds to changes in its environment. Plants can be
- regenerated and can yield a second, third and possibly even more harvests.
- In its natural environment, marijuana flowers in the fall, and then dies
- as the environment becomes inhospitable and the number of daylight hours
- decrease. However, if the daylength increases, the plants soon begin to
- revert from flowering to vegetative growth. At first, the plant produces
- single-fingered leaves, then 3 and 5 fingered leaves. Within a few weeks
- the plants grow at the rapid vegetative rate.
- There are several advantages to regenerating marijuana plants rather than
- starting from seed. The plant has been harvested and its qualities and
- potency are known. The plant has already built its infrastructure. Its
- root system and main stem are already grown so that it takes less energy and
- time for the plant to produce new vegetative growth. A regenerated plant
- produces the same amount of veetatipe rowth in 45 days that takes a plant
- started from seed 75 days.
- To regenerate a plant, some leaves and bud material are left on the stem
- as the plant is harvested. The stem may be let at nearly its full length,
- or cut back to only a few inches above the ground. The more stem with leaf
- material left on the plant, the faster it regenerates, as new growth
- develops at the sites of the remaining leaf material.
- The plant started flowering in response to a change in the light cycle.
- To stop the flowering process, the light cycle is turned back to a long day
- period. The plant reacts as if it had lived through the winter and renews
- growth as i it were spring. Within 7-10 days new non-flowering growth is
- apparent.
- Marijuana seems to react fastest to the change in light cycle when the
- light is kept on continually during the changeoper period. Ater it has
- indicated new 'rowth, the liht cycle may be adjusted to the normal garden
- lighting cycle.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 32 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Cloning"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Clones are a fancy name for cuttings. Almost everyone has taken a piece
- of a plant and placed it in water until it grew roots. As it developed, the
- leaves, flowers, fruit and other characteristics of the plant were exactly
- the same as the donor plant from which it was taken. That cutting was an
- exact genetic reproduction of a donor plant.
- Many growers prefer to start their garden from clones. There are several
- reasons for this.
- Growers must start only a few more plants than needed because all the
- clones, being the same genetic make-up, are the same sex as the donor,
- presumably, female.
- Clone gardens are usually derived from donors which were exceptional
- plants. The new plants are every bit as exceptional as the donor.
- The plants have the same growth and flowering patterns, maturation time,
- nutrient requirements, taste and high. The garden has a uniformity that
- allows the grower to use the space most efficiently.
- Unique plants with rare genetic characteristics can be saved genetically
- intact. For example, a grower had an infertile female. Even though the
- plant was in the midst of a mixed field, it produced no seed. At the end of
- the season the plant was harvested and that rate quality died with the
- plant. Had the grower made cuttings, that plant's traits would have been
- preserved.
- Clone gardens have disadpantages, too. If a disease attacks a garden,
- all of the plants have the same susceptibility because they all have the
- same qualities of resistance. The home gardener may get tired of smoking
- the same stuff all of the time. In terms of genetics, the garden is
- stagnant; there is no sexual reproduction taking place.
- Cuttings root easiest when they are made while the plant is still in its
- vegetative growth stage. However, they can be taken even as the plant is
- being harvested. Some growers think that cuttings from the bottom of the
- plant, which gets less light, are better clone material, but cuttings from
- all parts of the plant can root.
- Cuttings are likely to have a high dropoff rate if they are not given a
- moist, warm environment. They often succumb to stem rot or dehydration.
- Stem rot is usually caused by a lack of oxygen. Dehydration results from
- improper irrigation techniques, letting the medium dry, or from overtaxing
- the new plants. Cuttings do not have the root system required to transpire
- large amounts of water needed under bright light conditions. Instead, they
- are placed in a moderately lit area where their resources are not stressed
- to the limit.
- Growers who are making only 1 or 2 cuttings usually take the new growth
- at the ends of the branches. These starts are 4-6 inches long. All of the
- large leaves are removed and vegetative growth is removed except for an inch
- of leaves and shoots at the end tip. If large numbers of cuttings are being
- taken, a system using less donor-plant material is preferred. Starts can be
- made from many of the internodes along the branch which have vegetative
- growth. These starts are at least an inch long and each one has some leaf
- material.
- If the cuttings are not started immediately, air may get trapped at the
- cut end, preventing the cutting from obtaining water. To prevent this, 1/8
- inch is sliced off the end of the stem immediately before planting or
- setting to root.
- All cuts should be made with a sterile knife, scissors, or razor blade.
- Utensils can be sterilized using bleach, fire, or alcohol. Some
- horticulturists claim that scissors squeeze and injure remaining tissue, but
- this does not seem to affect surpival rates.
- It usually takes between 10 and 20 days for cuttings to root. They root
- fastest and with least dropoff when the medium us kept at about 65 degrees.
- Small cuttings can be rooted in water by floating them. The "Klone Kit",
- which is no longer ap ilable, used small styrofoam chips, which are sold as
- packing material, to hold the cuttings. Holes were placed in the chips with
- a pencil or other sharp instrument, and then the stem slipped through. The
- unit easily floats in the water. The kit also included rooting solution,
- 100 milliliter plastic cups (3 ounces), and coarse permiculite. The cups
- were hal filled with vermiculite and then the water-rooting solution was
- poured to the top of the cups. As the water lepel lowered, the cuttin's
- rooted in the permiculite.
- Styrofoam chips can be floated in the water without solid medium. When
- the cuttings begin to root, they are moved to permiculite. One grower
- adapted this t buds, packed them in food sealers, and then microwaved
- them to kill the mold. A bud should be left undisturbed until it is to be
- smoked. Every time it is moved, unpacked, or handled, some of the resin
- glands fall off. The glands can be seen cascading through the air whenever a
- is handled roughly.
- Sun leaves are unsuitable for smoking except through a waterpipe. The
- leaves can be prepared for smoking by soaking them in water for several
- hours and then rinsing the leaves. The water dissolves many of the pigments
- and resins including much of the chlorophyll, but the THC remains on the
- leaves. The water is dumped and then the leaves are dried. They smoke much
- smoother than they did originally. They can also be used in cooking, in
- brewing or the THC they hold canbe removed and concentrated.
- The smaller leaves which were trimmed from the buds, including single
- finger leaves and trimming, are quite potent but they do not smoke that
- smoothly. Trim can also be smoked in a waterpipe or soaked in water.
- The buds are usually saved for smoking. The quality of the bud improves
- for several weeks after it has dried. The THC acid loses its water molecule
- and becomes psychoactive. Once the bud is fairly dry, the evaporation can
- be speeded up by keeping the bud in a warm place for a few hours or by using
- a microwave oven.
-
-
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook - part 33 of 33
- by pH Imbalance
- "Experiments"
-
- from
-
- Marijuana Grower's Handbook
- [Indoor/Greenhouse Edition]
- Ed Rosenthal
-
-
- Horticulturists have reported a number of methods for increasing plant
- yields which are still in the experimental stage. These include stimulating
- growth using an electrical current, the use of estrogen and progestin, and
- the use of strobe lighting.
-
- ELECTRICITY
-
- Experiments at the University of Maryland indicate that a very weak
- electrical current running through the soil increases the growth rates of
- plants. This stimulation seems to be most effective when the plants are not
- receiving a lower than optimum level of light. Some researchers speculate
- that the current increases the roots' efficiency in obtaining nutrients by
- affecting the chemical-electrical charges of the nutrient dissolved in the
- water. One company manufactures a photovoltaic device specifically to
- charge the soil. The magazine Mother Earth News reported in the March 1984
- issue that plant growth can be doubled using these devices.
- "Sun Stiks" are available from Silicon Sensors, Highway 18 East,
- Dodgeville, Wisconsin 53533.
-
- FEMALE HORMONES - BIRTH CONTROL PILLS
-
- Over the years there have been a lot of anecdotal reports indicating that
- birth control pills stimulate plant growth. In 1983, a farmer in Texas
- reported that his tomato plants grew many more tomatoes after they received
- two treatments of estrogen-based pills.
- There may be a problem of safety regarding the use of these hormones.
- There have been no studies on what happens to the hormone once it is taken
- up by the plant. When estrogen is given to farm animals, it increases their
- growth rate, but the meat contains traces of the substance, which sometimes
- affects people who eat it.
-
- STROBE LIGHTS
-
- Some botanists have speculated that the pigments which are used in
- photosynthesis respond to energy peaks in the light wave. These scientists
- believe that much of the light is wasted by the plant because it isn't
- "peak". They speculate that much energy could be saved by supplying the
- plant only with light "peaks". One way to do this is by using a strobe unit
- in place of conventional lighting. The strobe flashes a high intensity of
- light, but it is on for only fractions of a second. The result is that the
- plants receive many light peaks in between periods of darkness.
- There has been little research on this theory, but one grower claimed to
- get satisfactory results.
- One way to use a strobe without too much risk might be to use it to
- supplement more conventional lighting. If a higher growth rate is noticed,
- the strobes could be tried alone. Should this system worm, electrical costs
- could be lowered by as much as 75%.
-
-
- [pH:And Thus Ends "Marijuana Growers Handbook"]
-
-
-
-
-