Bushmaster and Gravity Questions? +rep for good advice

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dlively11

Well-Known Member
Yeah Ben you are on aone man crusade alright.... Clearly the only people siding with you on this are your own group of sheep judging by their replies in this thread.

I just dont get why you have such a bone to pick with not the manufacturers but the people that use products like this. You make it so damn personal. OCD comes to mind.

Crappy looking gardens ? LOL, Guess I need to get a new picture up of my "Crappy garden" using all these snake oils ..... Would love to see you try and post your own grow that looks any better or half as good for that matter.

Talk about pot calling the kettle black. you are the one that jumps in this thread name calling left and right when unproked.

FYI

"YOU really are a fvcking idiot". (Quoted From Unclue Ben) Get over yourself
 

collective gardener

Well-Known Member
A question to those who have used Bushmaster. My current grow is all coco, and I noticed the label advises not to use it in pure coco settups. It does say that we can use the foilar application method with coco. My question is, has anyone used the foilar method? What concentration did you use? How many applications, and at what freq? Did you find it as effective as the standard treatment.

Evertime I used Bush in the past it was in a Sunshine mix, and without any problems. This is my first all coco grow. To avoid any nastiness that seems to have overtaken this, otherwise, very informative thread, please just first hand experiences with the product.
 

dlively11

Well-Known Member
A question to those who have used Bushmaster. My current grow is all coco, and I noticed the label advises not to use it in pure coco settups. It does say that we can use the foilar application method with coco. My question is, has anyone used the foilar method? What concentration did you use? How many applications, and at what freq? Did you find it as effective as the standard treatment.

Evertime I used Bush in the past it was in a Sunshine mix, and without any problems. This is my first all coco grow. To avoid any nastiness that seems to have overtaken this, otherwise, very informative thread, please just first hand experiences with the product.
I used it several grows as foilar. Didnt work nearly as well. I think if you use it that way you need to use it often. I think they say to use it every 2-3 days which can be a hassle for some. I would write down the height of the plants you use it on with labels and monitor them to see what kind of results you are getting. I think it states on the bottle how to mix as foilar. I just used their recomended dose. I use Hydroton myself.
 

Uncle Ben

Well-Known Member
This will provide you with some information on foliar feeding with Bushmaster.
http://www.bghydro.com/mmbgh/Others/Bush%20Master%20Instructions.pdf

It's a few years old, but it's the only information paper I've seen from them on the usage of their products.
"BG Hydro", sheesh. Glad they don't have an agenda LOL. :clap: http://www.bghydro.com/BGH/items.asp?Cc=NU

That's not an "information paper" in the truest sense of the word, it's a sales promotion from a vendor. Get real. You guys really are spinmeisters! Give me proof, fields tests, from a non-partisan, not-for-profit organization. Anyone ever heard of university studies? Of course not, because their test results would fly into your face. It's a credibility and trust issue.

If UB is bothering to reply to me I wouldn't know. Ignore is such a wonderful function.
Doncha peek now, ya hear?

UB
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
why are you all behaving this way? what am i to do with it all? i have a "job" here that you all are making very difficult. i'm willing to listen to suggestions. :neutral:
 

dlively11

Well-Known Member
why are you all behaving this way? what am i to do with it all? i have a "job" here that you all are making very difficult. i'm willing to listen to suggestions. :neutral:
Uncle Ben is the one who is really stirring the pot. Everyone else wants to either know about these products or to share their knowledge of them without having to listen to his constant BS. I'll be the first to admit I havent been nearly as composed as I'd like to be but this guy is just on the constant attack in every thread lately if he doesnt agree with it. I'd be happy to listen to what he has to say if it doesnt include insults , name calling and has some kind of facts or personal experience behind it. He is just full of emotions on something he doesnt even know anything about and it gets very old.
 

dlively11

Well-Known Member
FYI, here are some pics of my "snake oil" plants at a whopping 35 days into bloom. Over 10 strains and 75-80 plants on this tray as well. Using Bushmaster the first week, Gravity starting week 5 and Snow Storn Ultra from week 2 to the end. First picture is a 9 week strain as well.

These pics below will give a better idea of my "mutt" grow. Strains include C99, Hindu Kush, White Widow, Cherry AK 47, Bananna Kush, Agent Orange, Grapefruit, Bubblegum, Purple Chemdawg, a couple Blue Dreams ,couple Super skunks and a few Jack the Rippers. Plus a couple more I cant remember off the top of my head. Like I said every single one gets Top shelf status at ANY club so say what you will about quality. These plants will all yield over a OZ dried and cut, do the math , its going to yield pretty well for an experimental round =)





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Uncle Ben

Well-Known Member
FYI, here are some pics of my "snake oil" plants at a whopping 35 days into bloom. Over 10 strains and 75-80 plants on this tray as well. Using Bushmaster the first week, Gravity starting week 5 and Snow Storn Ultra from week 2 to the end. First picture is a 9 week strain as well.

These pics below will give a better idea of my "mutt" grow. Strains include C99, Hindu Kush, White Widow, Cherry AK 47, Bananna Kush, Agent Orange, Grapefruit, Bubblegum, Purple Chemdawg, a couple Blue Dreams ,couple Super skunks and a few Jack the Rippers. Plus a couple more I cant remember off the top of my head. Like I said every single one gets Top shelf status at ANY club so say what you will about quality. These plants will all yield over a OZ dried and cut, do the math , its going to yield pretty well for an experimental round =)
For the sake of forum political correctness, allow me to restate my position. His plants do not reflect anything out of the ordinary. They look like normal cannabis mutts, that's just what cannabis does when it is given salts, water, and light. YOU don't trick your plants. Their growth is controlled internally by hormones and photosynthesis activity. Case in point, I know the enablers will not react to my points but I'll illustrate as I have so often nonetheless below. Since the member posted plants 35 days into flowering, I'll do likewise, some around that point, some around 50 days flowering, one near harvest. These plants were raised in nothing more than under your typical HID lighting using cheap off the shelf Walmart fertilizer, watered by hand using high pH tap water. Why the reiteration? Cause that's all you need to grow out a flowering weed. Indoor yields? My norm (and expectations) is 5-10 oz "top shelf" bud from each plant.

TrainXSweettooth58DaysFlowerB2_1_04.jpg





TrainXSweettooth44DaysFlower1_17_04.jpg



C99C@6.5wks-2_18Sharpened.jpg

Closeup7WksFlowering1_23_2004.jpg


UB
 

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hoagtech

Well-Known Member
what happened to my post? I said those buds looked good. modded? why? IM not a fan of cencorship
Edit:
Nevermind thiers two posts that have the same picture talking about the same topic. a little redundant but whatever.
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
You also have my permission to clean up the kid's potty mouth and that includes his childish rants in my threads. https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-marijuana-cultivation/151706-uncle-bens-topping-technique-get-166.html


At least I post facts as opposed to cheap shots.

Note - post above edited with new text and photos.

UB


it's NOT a "weed". :roll:



Weed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is about plants specifically called weeds. For other uses, see Weed (disambiguation).
See also: Invasive species
Contents

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A dandelion is a common weed all over the world, especially in Europe, Asia and the Americas.


A weed in a general sense is a plant that is considered by the user of the term to be a nuisance, and normally applied to unwanted plants in human-controlled settings, especially farm fields and gardens, but also lawns, parks, woods, and other areas. More specifically, the term is often used to describe native or nonnative plants that grow and reproduce aggressively.[1] Generally, a weed is a plant in an undesired place.
In Weeds of the West,[2] the authors determined which plants to include in the book based on the following criterion, attributed to J.M. Torrell:
A plant that interferes with management objectives for a given area of land at a given point in time.
Weeds may be unwanted for a number of reasons: they might be unsightly, or crowd out or restrict light to more desirable plants (especially crop plants) or use limited nutrients from the soil. They can harbor and spread plant pathogens that infect and degrade the quality of crop or horticultural plants. Some weeds are a nuisance because they have thorns or prickles, some have chemicals that cause skin irritation or are hazardous if eaten, or have parts that come off and attach to fur or clothes.
The term weed in its general sense is a subjective one, without any classification value, since a "weed" is not a weed when growing where it belongs or is wanted. Indeed, a number of "weeds" have been used in gardens or other cultivated-plant settings. An example is the corncockle, Agrostemma, which was a common field weed exported from Europe along with wheat, but now sometimes grown as a garden plant.[3]
Professor Richard C. Lewontin of Harvard University defines weeds as plants that create environmental conditions in which they themselves cannot reproduce. He takes the example of pine trees that crowd out sunlight such that their own offspring cannot grow. Weeds continue to exist, because the environment is continually being disturbed to create open conditions for new generations, such as forest fires and human activity.[4]
 
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