WhatWouldBobDo
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- Jan 20, 2025
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Keep in mind that alot of the bud from the ’80’s and ’90’s that was grown was alot better in memory than in fact.This has been on my mind. I had a friend in the 80's that decided to grow in his attic. He dug soil from his backyard, planted seeds and grew 6 plants all the way to flower, no problems.. He had nothing, no nutrients, nothing and he pulled it off. How can this be? (I blame LED's, he used high powered halogen bulbs but that's another story).... Point is, he had little to work with and it was very simple...His plants were green and healthy all the way through.
Bag weed wasn’t the 25% THC that you get now. High THC back then was 15%, but most was probably in the 10% range. And what you got from your local dealer usually wasn’t that good. And we knew nothing about terpenes. So if you could get 7% from a local dealer, if you were able to grow some plants, get a few oz., that’s 5%, it would be like manna from heaven. But today, if you grew something that, with no terpene levels, you’d probably throw it away.
Their goals of growing are very different from yours. You both want healthy plants, but beyond that it gets very different.The place I visited is just what you say, competition growers (advanced) growing pumpkins etc...
I also grow hot peppers, and am linked into the pepper community. In my area, you typically plant seeds outdoors in April, and hope to harvest in September or October. So about 5 or 6 months. If you start seeds indoors, you start in January or February. But your goal is to give the plants a head start, and transplant outdoors in April. You’ll still harvest in September, but hopefully from a bigger, more healthy plant, with more peppers. But if you baby the plant, you’re actually extending the grow time from 5 or 6 months, to 8 or 9 months. And I don’t know any serious pepper growers that are completing their entire grow indoors (greenhouse, sure).
Contrast that with cannabis growers. If you plant outdoors, yeah you are looking at planting and harvesting around the same time (excluding autos, or really late harvesting plants). But it’s really common for cannabis growers to attempt to shorten the growing time period, making shorter more compact plants, and harvesting in 3 months instead of 7. If you tried to do that with traditional produce (except for your leafy greens) people would be laughing at you too.
So alot of these vegetable, soil guys are looking to mimic what the plant needs, when the plant needs it, and listen to the plant and let it grow. But cannabis growers are looking to push the limits, and give the plant what it needs when we think it needs it (or a little bit earlier). So “slow release” fertilizers are great when you want to have the nutrients waiting in the soil for when the plant decides it wants it. But if you’re looking to finish a plant in 90-120 days, you need to give the nutrients to the plant when they are going to need it. “Conventional” approaches are to say “ok, so the plant needs P and K, here’s a bottle with P and K, so here you go.”
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