FourPlants
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I am in a legal state. The way the law is written is they aren't to be visible from the sidewalk/street. So, I just want to block visibility. You are right that it may invite the neighbors to come check them out though. HahahaWhew! Nice ones (the flowers, I mean).
They may tend to draw the eye of passersby. May draw neighbors to come over and admire/chat about them. Within mere feet of your stinky grow….
I am in a legal state. The way the law is written is they aren't to be visible from the sidewalk/street. So, I just want to block visibility. You are right that it may invite the neighbors to come check them out though. Hahaha
Sounds about the way our laws are written, my state only went legal a few years ago so I am sure they looked at all the other states to build the framework. We are only allowed four plants though.I'm in Michigan and our home grow laws in my eyes are pretty lenient. 12 plants, not visible by the public (pretty much the same) however there is one more stipulation ... within a locked area. A fenced in yard with a lock on the gate satisfies that requirement. It's pretty easy to be in line with the law.
One thing about those giant sunflowers. We grew them one year. They become very tall and top heavy. They will need more than a stake for support. If we were to grow them again, I'd probably grow them up a trellis so they are well supported. We had trouble keeping them standing. The dogs would run through them and down they come ... broken at the level of the support stake. It was frustrating enough that we haven't grown them since. If you can keep them standing, they make a beautiful privacy fence. Good luck, I envy you if you can make it work because they are worth the effort.
I built a 10' x 20' greenhouse and we're loving it. Of course curious eyes assume we're growing pot but they don't know for sure. Especially right now with the lights on ... it lights up the whole neighborhood.Sounds about the way our laws are written, my state only went legal a few years ago so I am sure they looked at all the other states to build the framework. We are only allowed four plants though.
You bring up a good point about locks though. I should add a pad lock to the gate.
I already have been thinking about support for the girls so I may as well think about for the sunflowers. T-bars and some fancy string work. Who knows, maybe even some wire. I already was thinking about doing trellis walls on both sides of the fence as ways to block the view and grow some veggies.
A cheap Ryobi cordless electric leaf blower is what I use.It looks like a wonderful setup. A greenhouse would be super nice; I am lucky that we are zone 8A here, so I get a decent season. We are fairly humid though, so I need to have my gameplan to deal with it. I have read some on here talking about leaf blowers on wet mornings.... pretty sure I will upset my neighbors firing off my backpack blower every morning so I may look for a small electric one on a Father's Day sale or something, Will be nice to have for drying my cars when I detail them instead of using the backpack one.
Really need to decide on what I want to do for training soon too.
Just did that myselfSounds about the way our laws are written, my state only went legal a few years ago so I am sure they looked at all the other states to build the framework. We are only allowed four plants though.
You bring up a good point about locks though. I should add a pad lock to the gate.
I already have been thinking about support for the girls so I may as well think about for the sunflowers. T-bars and some fancy string work. Who knows, maybe even some wire. I already was thinking about doing trellis walls on both sides of the fence as ways to block the view and grow some veggies.
Moisture is definitely one of my concerns. I am coastal and have high humidity. I have also heard the pest are aggressive. It is al;l a learning experience for me being my first outdoor grow.A cheap Ryobi cordless electric leaf blower is what I use.
Even in a greenhouse once we start dropping below dew point during heavy flower problems can occur. Dew point is your enemy so choose strains that finish in your area before your temperature drops below the dew point at night. That shouldn't be a problem in your zone but it is in mine.
Those are autoflowers in the greenhouse and will be done late June/early July. They are already in heavy flower. I have 12 more started here in the basement which I will be rotating out to the greenhouse in June. I chose this route for this year because I'm tired of dealing with the damp Michigan fall. We get a lot of cloud cover along with that moisture so bud rot and WPM can be a problem.
Just did that myselfgoes up 6’ same height as the fence gives me about 4’ depth and 40’ width to play with, about 80 peas, cucumbers, beans planted all along the bottom of the net
Used 8’ steel posts (old top rail from a chain link fence) cut it down to 8’ sections then pounded them 2’ into the ground, the trellis netting I got on Amazon I think it was 50’x 5’ same net I’m using on my scrog table
What's hilarious is that right now on the list of "Latest posts", right above this one is "What's GNick55 up to?"Whackin off in the tool shed gotta be the best thread name evernice looking babies ya got there to mate
What's hilarious is that right now on the list of "Latest posts", right above this one is "What's GNick55 up to?"
So it reads:
"What's GNick55 up to?"
"Whackin' off in the tool shed"
Hahahahaha!!! Nice.......sorry GNick....nothing but respect.
Hahahahaha!!! Nice.......sorry GNick....nothing but respect.
Yeah I should have taken an actual snapshot. That's awesome.
Actually it says "What's GNick55 up TOO". So......it's him, and everyone else.
Poor tool shed.....
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