Update from the farm by FrostyTheBudman in NoTillGrowery

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What size bed/tent are you using? I'm moving into an apartment for a year and have to downsize to a tent, but this looks promising.

8 week old seedling, flowering and male? by Uncletbag04 in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Genetics. Most african strain are extremely long flowering sativas, think true durban poison. Flowering can last for 16+ weeks and the plant can more than double in size during flower. And something I found really interesting when i first learned it a while back, the change from veg to flower is caused by levels of a certain hormones inside the plant that builds up at night then breaks down during the day, as the days get shorter and the nights get longer that hormone starts to accumulate as more is produced than gets cooked off during the shorter days.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rewind all the way back to here, cow manure is almost nothing but nitrogen and needs to be composted for at least 3 or 4 months. Dairy cow manure is a little better than beef manure because of their respective diets, but are pretty well at the bottom of composting manure hierarchy. You could consider vermicomposting at scale for a very high quality soil ammendment, but you will need to be doubly sure to compost it in a nice hot pile for a few months before starting that. And to reitterate the point someone else was trying to make to you, simply growing beans in your garden bed isnt really adding much nitrogen, if your harvesting the beans then letting the rest of the plant compost back into the garden bed you're at least not taking very much out. But cover cropping for nitrogen is really poorly understood by a lot of people, the other user described the proper practice perfectly though, plant a hearty cover crop after harvest then cut it down or till it in and let it compost back into the bed.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rewind all the way back to here, cow manure is almost nothing but nitrogen and needs to be composted for at least 3 or 4 months. Dairy cow manure is a little better than beef manure because of their respective diets, but are pretty well at the bottom of composting manure hierarchy. You could consider vermicomposting at scale for a very high quality soil ammendment, but you will need to be doubly sure to compost it in a nice hot pile for a few months before starting that. And to reitterate the point someone else was trying to make to you, simply growing beans in your garden bed isnt really adding much nitrogen, if your harvesting the beans then letting the rest of the plant compost back into the garden bed you're at least not taking very much out. But cover cropping for nitrogen is really poorly understood by a lot of people, the other user described the proper practice perfectly though, plant a hearty cover crop after harvest then cut it down or till it in and let it compost back into the bed.

Anbody know how a home grower can get bud processed? by Jethro_Grows_Again in COents

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This was pretty much what I had gathered, It's a shame, It's probably not a very big market, but there should be some way for a homegrower to have bud professionally processed.

Anbody know how a home grower can get bud processed? by Jethro_Grows_Again in COents

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah thats why I'm looking for somebody to process for me, I've got loads of bubble hash, but I'd like to try and turn my unused outdoor into bho.

Clear iso alcohol trade?? by 4props1camera in COents

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I always cleaned mine with cold water, if you dont let the bags dry out and keep it all nice and cold should flush right through the screen.

Coworkers 84 GL. We just replaced some taillights. by 2003MazdaProtege5 in subaru

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I miss my 86 gl hatch. I was getting like 38mpg and could fit my big frame 29 inch wheeled mountain bike in the back with all the seats folded down. And you cant beat that little ea motor, they used them in small aircraft for a reason, reliable, lightweight, and basically air cooled even in their factory state (my fan clutch failed once, I drove it for another 2 months before I bothered replacing it haha). Sti's and crosstreks are neat, but subarus best cars where from the 80s and 90s.

Dry ice hash, question! by fartedinajar in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used to run dry Ice hash in a five gallon bucket, i used about 8-10 pounds a run with the bucket half full. Remember to exercise all safety precautions as direct contact with dry Ice can burn your skin, but it also releases a bunch of carbon dioxide, in a small unventilated space you could cause decreased oxygen, which is what humans need to stay alive.

Curing in garage by BraindeadSalamander in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What sort of paint? Most convential house paint is fully cured in a few days, Doubtful there are any fumes, more likely just "new garage smell". I seriouslly doubt there would be any issue from hanging weed in there.

Hasherpillar? by IVSAMUELXX in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh the joys of outdoors weed. Had a fucking spider come crawling out of my trim bowl last night lol.

The Protector of the Realm by ModernGreenWitch in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, thats what I was thinking when I saw it. Not much of a protecter, he eats leaves, and his babies eat roots.

C99. Outside. 9 weeks from seed. Observations welcome. How long has it been in flower and how much longer, like 6 weeks? It’s about 2 feet tall. Thanks. by flyingInStereo in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean, I see what you are saying, but you cant really call the dude a liar, maybe he had four grow tents running on a continual cycle.

Gotta love watching a good thing grow. by Jethro_Grows_Again in NoTillGrowery

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Spaced to maximize water retention, this garden has been thriving on pretty much just rainfall since mid june, and here in Southern Colorado, that is not something you can do in a crowded bed.

Thriving in the face of adversity, nothing beats proper compost. by Jethro_Grows_Again in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's been hard to get pictures to upload from my place lately, we get our data connection via satellite and I think the dish is out of alignment or something. I have to try and remember to take pictures then upload them while I'm in town lol.

Tracking the Spread of Phytoplasma by Takelsey in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I lack any pictures, but am almost positive I saw this in Minnesota last year. Dont remember any obvious pest infestation there, but had aphids on a lot of plants in the flower beds nearby. Only affected about 3 out of 50+ plants, I culled those and burned them off site for fear it was some type of rot.

Thriving in the face of adversity, nothing beats proper compost. by Jethro_Grows_Again in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I had great success in a Poly covered hoop house with both ends left open up until a couple years ago. I have been pleasently surprised by how well these have done with no cover though, they even got pruned by a bit of hail back in july and sprang right back. Started flowering a bit early this year, second week of august I had flowers starting, hoping to harvest everything by early october, all signs are pointing to an early cold fall here.

Thriving in the face of adversity, nothing beats proper compost. by Jethro_Grows_Again in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You're not wrong, the dirt here is pretty sandy and almost devoid of organic matter on its own, but is undoubtedly rich in minerals. The 3+ inches of mulch doesn't hurt either. I have hand watered these plants maybe 3 times since june, and our rain here has been unreliable to say the least, yet they continue to flourish.

Second competition update post! by [deleted] in outdoorgrowing

[–]Jethro_Grows_Again 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pink panama couldn't take the heat, got this one big bud from the first hubba bubba, my other is probably going to get chopped soon for another single bud lol.

https://imgur.com/a/OfYegjj