Blaze
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- Joined
- Nov 17, 2009
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The best kinda steaks...Wrapped up the day by grilling up some perfectly medium rare T-bong steaks
Yes, it didn't work. Maybe I wasn't as diligent as I should have been, but the weeds I used it on threw their heads back and scoffed at me, so I left in shame.I've read that dish soap and white vinegar can make a good organic herbicide, has anyone actually tried it yet?
Now is the time to thin them out. You'll get bigger and tastier fruit if you thin.Two of the four apples I planted 4 years ago are loaded with fruit.
Fantastic! I thought you had two who were brooding, though. Did the other one give it up? I now have two chicks, each a week apart, new Momma broody hen is VERY protective, bordering on aggressive. She's always been aggressive though, when she was just a chick I thought for sure she was a rooster, she was that aggressive.Our broody hen hatched her clutch this week - we got 11 chicks out of 13 eggs and so far all 11 have survived. Looks like we have a good mama hen after all, a ratio that high is great, even for an incubator.
Fantastic! I thought you had two who were brooding, though. Did the other one give it up? I now have two chicks, each a week apart, new Momma broody hen is VERY protective, bordering on aggressive. She's always been aggressive though, when she was just a chick I thought for sure she was a rooster, she was that aggressive.
I see chicken dinner in someone's future! :D
I think something like what Humboldt passed would be reasonable. Their guidelines are for the most part in line with what the state passed too, which makes things simpler. There are different licenses for different types of cultivations (indoor, outdoor, greenhouse) and different tiers for how large the garden is. The larger the grow, the higher the tier, the more restrictions and fees you have to deal with. There are limits on how many permits can be held by each individual and on each property to prevent a couple of large operations from planting like 20 acres and putting all their neighbors out of business. The tier 2 cultivation for outdoor and greenhouse is 10,000 square feet, or about a quarter acre, which I think is reasonable. I believe Humboldt will be allowing larger tier 3 grows of up to a few acres but they are much more heavily regulated so I don't think we will be seeing too many of them.
The MRRSA act already outlined all this stuff very clearly, that is why it is so frustrating to see our local officials fumbling everything so badly - the heavy lifting has already been done for them. Other than the issue of personal cultivation and concerns over restrictions on distributors I think that MRRSA was actually a well thought act for the most part.
It should be regulated and overseen by the Agriculture department, just like any other crop, NOT the Sheriff department. Mendocino really needs to get away from this whole plant count nonsense too, and go with square footage. The MMRSA act regulates everything by square footage, as does the water board. Plant counts are a totally nonsensical and idiotic way to regulate production - a single plant can produce anywhere from 1 oz to 15 lbs. Canopy space instead of plant counts also makes enforcement and regulation far more simple and easy - so long as you are within your canopy area, numbers don't matter. Not to mention plant counts push people to have to grow smaller numbers of larger plants, which is very inefficient. Bigger plants require more labor, more water, more fertilizer and soil, and usually of lower quality, all of which put the farmer at a competitive disadvantage.
Zoning is another big concern, depending on how they implement that it could screw over a lot of people. I agree that commercial production should not be in residential neighborhoods (I can't run cattle in town for example), but allowing the smaller tiers of cultivation for Rural Residential and smaller parcels, with the larger tiers on larger properties with Timer Production, Agriculture, Rangeland, and Commercial zoning is reasonable. If they end up restricting it to just the type 1A ag zoning like they did in Lake County, 99% of the growers in this county will be locked out right off the bat since the only areas that have that are the vineyards down on the valley floors.
They really need to address the aspect of nursery production too. That was one of the other really stupid reason to have a plant count - it makes compliance almost impossible because you ALWAYS need to start more seeds and clones to account for males, duds, and casualties to pests. Would you ever see a tomato farmer germinate *exactly* how many seeds they would need to plant their acreage? Of course not - they would go out of business because they wouldn't have enough plants. Also how is a nursery supposed to stay in business if they can only propagate 25 plants (which is how it is right now)? Poorly thought our restrictions like that just force people to cheat or to just ignore the guidelines out right, which has the exact opposite effect of what regulations and guidelines are supposed to achieve in the first place.
That's very true, we don't have mandatory minimums here for cannabis anymore which is huge. We are sort of stuck in this weird limbo now though, where we have agencies like the NCRWB (North Coast Regional Water Board) wanting people to pay fees and sign up for their program, yet it offers no legal protection. So they want your money, but they still want to be able to bust you too. It doesn't help that the county board of supervisors is utterly incompetent and refuses to do their job and craft some sort of local program. It is pretty sad - Mendocino has been at the forefront of cannabis cultivation for decades, yet now we are getting left in the dust.I hear you bro but relatively you guys are not that bad.. I'd give *everything just to be able to grow ANY number of plants without the fear of the police knocking on my door and a mandatory jailtime of 2 years... up here regulation is very far from being implemented. But the grass is always greener on the other side right?...
Everything looks really great man! beautiful job!
found your thread finally!! Great info and work my friend! Can definitely see the passion and professionalism in every picture, and post. Your a credit to growers everywhere. Its definitely hard position they have left growers in, I dont personally set out to be a criminal, and certainly don't want to live under the law. But when the laws we the people vote in are so radically changed...I know here in Oregon the prop 91 to legalize that the people voted on looks nothing like the monstrosity on the books now. It seems clear the government is corrupt at every level, so what do we do? All I know is I love growing, Ill be growing when there's no money in it. hell the grower in my would love it to be so accepted I could plant my cannabis right next to the hops and no one give it a second look. The business sense in me fears when Monsanto and Phillip Morris gobble the market. They will have to pay off Pfizer first though lol
Anyway, sorry for the rant! Plants are looking on time, and once the weather is in our favor, It will be epic seeing in go.
Thanks for the contributions to the cannabis community,
stay free stay high
papa
Thats awesome @Blaze ... Even if they don't get everything totally perfect this year its a sign that they are willing to move in the right direction.... Ten thousand square feet of green house would be awesome--(thats a lot of light dep)
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