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jtuck004

(15,882 posts)
5. It is very easy to grow from seed. It is somewhat more difficult to grow well, but
Mon Feb 16, 2015, 06:45 AM
Feb 2015

that's just practice and learning.

You can grow inside or outside. Inside you are trying to re-create the outdoors. You can grow in soil, or use hydroponics and circulate oxygen and nutrients. Light can come from compact florescent lights, and although the yield will be less than if using High Intensity lighting, that next step up can cost you $1000 pretty quick. But it can also increase your yield by quite a bit, so might be a good investment. If you have extra money, you can buy digital lights, although they are more costly and may not give the same output. But they are cheaper to run than HID lights.

Ballast - $200
Bulb - $120
Fixture - $100
Tent - $200
Exhaust Fan - $250
Exhaust Filter $100
Ducting...
Soils, Fertilizers from $100 per 8-10 week grow to hundreds, depending on what you want to spend money on. You can make your own as well, run a bucket with an aerator, perhaps growing plants like Comfrey or Stinging nettle which can be used as fertilizer, or adding earthworm poop, alfalfa and kelp meal, other things to the water so it grows beneficial organisms with which you water.

You don't need all of that, but you might. The plants can get very stinky for a few weeks when growing and it is nice to be able to duct it outside rather than bathe your house and clothes in the smell.

Indoor plants are subject to problems such as spider mites and powdery mildew, problems that are usually successfully addressed early in a preventative program, using things like Rosemary, Neem Oil, and high PH water.

The plants grow for about 8 to 12 weeks, in two stages, vegetative and then flowering. During the first or "veg" stage it is developing roots and flower sites, and this can be as short as a week or two or as long as months, depending on the result you want. The lights stay on most of the day at this stage, some keep them on 24 hours. When you are ready you move them into flower - that is, you change the light from 24 on to 12 on and 21 off. This tells the plant the season is progressing and it begins to mature.

You asked about keeping them going. Just before you put them into flower you will take a couple of cuttings and put them in your do it yourself cloning bucket. They will develop roots and turn into the same plant, with the same sex, as the one you are flowering.

Sex. I guess it's time for that talk. There are male and female plants. You want female, because they have more of what you really want. You will be watching your plants in the vegetative state, and when you see a finally identify a male plant, you will kill it. They will fertilize every plant in your place faster than you can know and soon you will have thousands and thousands of seeds, and little flower.

The flowering stage will last for 8 to 12 weeks, depending on the strain. You will need something that magnifies to about 60x (they sell cheap pocket scopes for about $3 on ebay) so you can see the plant and look for the signs, also to check for bugs.

At harvest you will need to decide how to properly dry and cure, a subject unto its own, but certainly learnable. Read up, you can turn your crop into hay if you let it stay too moist, or get harsh if let dry too quickly.

The plants put out THCA and CBD's. The THCA is converted to THC, and that is what gets people intoxicated. The other compounds are generally more sought after by some medical patients, although many people use it for anxiety and to combat depression, and for them the TCH is more important. The cure you do can influence these.

It wouldn't hurt you to develop a little relationship with a shop in town. You may intend to ship everything in, until you actually see what those shipping charges are going to be.

That help?

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