eyecandi
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Unless you're dealing with a contingent of locals who are using the smell as a means by which to impinge upon your rights to grow and consume, as I have been. The smell, in fact, has been the most often quoted reason to limit outdoor cultivation where I live. Fortunately indoor cultivation wasn't impinged upon, but it most certainly will be up next if people are smelling it.I should have added that ozone will kill your bud's smell... definitely don't use it with plants that have buds on them. Before we had big charcoal filters I used to build in-duct ozone generators using neon light ballasts... but some people introduced ozone into the flowering room, and it has a huge negative effect on the smell. A large enough dose will kill ALL of the smell... not good.
^^^ ???? No research on the part of cannabis growers into this? Tssss....I use Physan 20 for sanitation and sterilization. Does anyone know if these mites are affected by quaternary ammonium compounds like Physan 20? Hold on... lemme read mah label. Ok, nothing on the label, but lookie what Google Scholar found me!
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v212/n5062/abs/212643b0.html
Here's the list of scholarly articles for my search, using terms "quaternary ammonium effect eriophyid mites."
If those of you who are dealing with these aren't including quaternary ammonium compounds into your IPM strategy, you may want to consider using it.
I'm trying to understand you here miss maiden: Are you talking about using physan as a foliar?Unless you're dealing with a contingent of locals who are using the smell as a means by which to impinge upon your rights to grow and consume, as I have been. The smell, in fact, has been the most often quoted reason to limit outdoor cultivation where I live. Fortunately indoor cultivation wasn't impinged upon, but it most certainly will be up next if people are smelling it.
^^^ ???? No research on the part of cannabis growers into this? Tssss....
amen bud! Learned that when i was 14....
I didn't read enough of the abstracts to move beyond quaternary ammonium compounds and their effect on eriophyid mites. But I'm pretty sure I provided the link to the entire Google Scholar search I did, and from there anyone can read the abstracts. If you have a membership to a university library, you may even be able to read the entire paper.I'm trying to understand you here miss maiden: Are you talking about using physan as a foliar?
As far as the smell, as I said, I've been dealing with the local board of supervisors impinging seriously upon county patients' ability to grow outdoors, and the reasoning that they're using is the smell as a nuisance. In fact, the smell is what allows them to declare it a per se public nuisance. In fact, public nuisance is what many municipalities are using as a means by which to undo the CUA and MMPA, and many of them are using the smell as the basis.
Interesting problem, Seamaiden. If it's a public nuisance then you'd think it was harmful and not just a smell everyone doesn't appreciate. Sense of smell is COMPLETELY objective, so unless it's a harmful chemical, saying the smell of mmj is a nuisance has no basis in fact whatsoever, many people might find it pleasant. The problem with them doing this with mmj, is that it could be applied to anything that smells.
I think that if you tested this in court and came up with the right arguments, there is no way you could lose because the logic to call a simple smell a public nuisance is flawed in a rural farming area. I could see it being a nuisance in a city, but that's a whole 'nother set of rules.
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