Welcome to the farm, there's a lot of help here if you need it.....You're lucky to have weather you can plant outdoors in....I've still 6" snow although its been melting through the day....What part of the country / world you live in? cold north Atlantic for me in Canada
Do you want to play a game? I'm an
avid chess player pushing 1550 at chess .com
I'm living in Thailand where it's been legal for all of five minutes. A bunch of OG growers at masters at their craft but growing world class strains in the tropics comes with its own challenges. Really I'm looking for a plant that grows like a sativa and smokes like an indica.
Non-freezing winters are a definite plus, but less than ideal. I'm in the mountains so it got to 50 F at night then 95+ during the day.
For my first grow - after frying some indica seedlings - was Thai Stick and Durban Poison (indica pheno). My first microenvironment sucked and the plants got waterlogged and wind damaged with maybe 6 hours of direct sun per day. With beginners enthusiasm I transplanted them a few times before settling on a final home with maybe 9 hours of sun per day.
Since I was growing 12:12 from seed, the plants are about as forgiving as autos. After 30-40 days she'll start flowering whether you're ready or not. The biggest poison died just after she started flowering: ants seemed to have moved in as root rot got worse. So my first harvest was 0.5 grams. I showed mercy to the other poison, which I was growing in compacted soil as a control, transplanted it and hope to harvest 5 more grams in the mext few days.
On the other hand, the Thais can really handle a lot of abuse. It makes sense because they're from here. Also they stretch 2.5x which really helps for plants with such a short veg phase.
My next crop was (is) lemon hazes which grow like crazy in the hot sun so they're great for practicing some training techniques.
Now spring has sprung I've got some blue dreams that I popped two weeks ago. I didn't bother hardening them off but they don't seem to mind full sun. Sometimes the stem loses turgidity when it gets over 100f but those that wilted don't seem to be held back.
Here they are looking sad after a thunderstorm.