Great question and thank you for responding... Honestly I have no idea I commercially raised several Acres of rhubarb outside and it benefits so well from the Sheep shit that I want to try it in my indoor garden. I usually just use the sheep manure as a top dressing for my indoor plants but I'd...
All right organic Growers are you ready for some hypotheticals. I produce around 200,000 lb of sheep manure every year during lambing season which is February and March. Normally I take all of the manure and after I harvest my rhubarb crop I will scatter it over my rhubarb patch. I do not...
They primarily eat frogs small mice and other snakes. I live in an 1850s stone foundation farmhouse with nothing for miles but corn and wheat fields whenever it starts to get cool my house is the target of hundreds of snakes and mice.
All right with the lights 24 inch away from the soil which puts the light 22 24 inch away from the plant there seems to be no ill effect in the first 24 hours
I'm hey Dunge thanks and encouragement
I dropped one of my lamps when I was adjusting it down tonight so I have to go to town tomorrow and get another light bulb I'll pick up high pressure sodium light as well and see if it'll make it ignite
Thank you Chemistry
what would you suggest I add? Like a compost tea or worm casting? I have a worm bin and I compost a large amount of compost every year so making a slurry to add to the soil during flower would not be difficult to do
As for the bay lights when I took them down I went to resell them and I was only going to get 15 to 20 bucks per light I'm a big proponent of use what you have. I like the idea of putting additional 1000 that'll have to be tried next grow though because I don't want to be moving them all around...
Thanks Midwest toker
Our family has been farming this ground for Generations and once every hundred years or so a new crop comes up that makes it economically viable for us to stay in business that product will probably be marijuana for myself or my kids. But anytime you are learning a new crop...
This is not me arguing but trying to look for a little understanding when you are growing crops in close proximity to each other it encourages downward root growth instead of lateral because once one plants Roots hit another plants Roots it starts to slow down which makes the roots dive deeper...