pulpoinspace
Well-Known Member
Sounds like fun. I'll be following along for sure!
if i take some pics it will be with a regular digital camera for obvious reasons. its got everything nearly set up for a winter grow, im just gonna keep them on the smaller side. my only worry is using fems and get a hermie. just need some finishing touches and ill be ready for some camping sessions.I commend you for going to the water and not making it come to you, and have wondered about innovative natural setups like that.
I imagine you won’t be posting too many pics to not spoil it but sounds like a cool spot.
Sounds like you want to do it all-natural so I won’t get on a box about streams and wildlife.
I’m really curious to hear how/if it goes yo’!
Good luck, and goodwill
when im done with it the place will be a no go zone. cross a knee/waist high brook only to meet a pile of deadfall and thorn vines, knotweed. the stuff i got in my backyard i use as a wall.Idk if he realized he was calling himself that but I can think of much worse things to be. I'd say I'm a real special clown, probably.
my take so far would be a 1 year college course. if you cant haul lumber and build a green house and wire it up... well bud you best be getting into a new course."Swamp Growers" would be a reality show I could get behind.
im sure its overly wet, and i know i can dig and get water np. just wondering when it comes time for transplant if i can use logs to make flower beds and that be enough to keep the roots from rotting? all the hardwood trees are dead and only pine/spruce left.you csan allways cut the bottom of a flower pot so the roots can dive down and the pot can be for air roots. but you do need an exploritory hole dug to make shure its not overly wet
If there is a wet spring season, but then a dryer summer and fall there is a work around. One way would be to dig a hole, let it fill with water, then put sticks across it to hold up the grow bag. Many use black trash bags with a few holes punched in the bottom. Once it drys out, you lift the bag off and remove the sticks so it will go down into the hole.You have to worry about water table. Dig a hole and if it fills with water, you're screwed cuz that's the water table and cant grow there well. But you could do an above ground grow in that location or berm up soil so roots wont rot in the water table.
When I worked on the grass seed farm, part of my job was tearing down the beaver dam. It was an ongoing job. ie, they keep rebuilding.i have a few ideas on lowering the water table aka drain the swamp lol. find a dam down stream and wreck it or divert it with picks and shovels, the one upstream is heavy duty in terms of sand and debris washed up onto it so it may be a tougher one further down if i can access it. . . . .
they are little bastards, all the hardwood trees in that area is dead, for big trees just the evergreen are healthy and alive and other random saplings.When I worked on the grass seed farm, part of my job was tearing down the beaver dam. It was an ongoing job. ie, they keep rebuilding.
If you get a herm, leave it or move it (if possible) off into the forest to go wild.if i take some pics it will be with a regular digital camera for obvious reasons. its got everything nearly set up for a winter grow, im just gonna keep them on the smaller side. my only worry is using fems and get a hermie. just need some finishing touches and ill be ready for some camping sessions.
Not to mention never eat a beaver if it smells like fish.Sounds like its probably full of deer so take that as a factor. Also beaver dont eat fish
LOL the most helpful comment here.Not to mention never eat a beaver if it smells like fish.
I mean, they do use beaver “anal”-gland secretions (castorium) in some colognes, AND flavorings...Dam it I've been doing that wrong too. I was told if it smelled like fish it was a good dish but if it smells like cologne leave it alone. So confused