Cali Cajun
Well-Known Member
The injured branch looks like it's going to make it - the canopy is mostly even (about as even as my clumsy fingers can do) and plants are filling out horizontally nicely in the tent. All the girls have had some time to adjust to transplanting; I think I'm going to flip tomorrow.
I just ordered a couple of plastic containers and 1,000 red wigglers from a local worm farmer in the next county; excited to give a worm bin a try! For my next grow I want to move away from super soil and start putting together my own with my own home-grown compost and vermicompost. My wife and I tore out our back lawn last year, and I'm gearing up to start conditioning the soil once it gets a bit cooler. Our house was built in the late 50's with a partially below ground garage / storage area. When they originally excavated the house it looks like they dumped all the clay from digging out the garage on the back lawn - which would explain why we always had terrible drainage issues with the lawn. The ground currently is a mess - concrete-like clay, tons of rocks, and root infiltration from an oak growing up on the hill. I want to dig 8 or so inches down and start working compost into the soil - hoping to do a winter crop of crimson clover to start healing the soil.
I just ordered a couple of plastic containers and 1,000 red wigglers from a local worm farmer in the next county; excited to give a worm bin a try! For my next grow I want to move away from super soil and start putting together my own with my own home-grown compost and vermicompost. My wife and I tore out our back lawn last year, and I'm gearing up to start conditioning the soil once it gets a bit cooler. Our house was built in the late 50's with a partially below ground garage / storage area. When they originally excavated the house it looks like they dumped all the clay from digging out the garage on the back lawn - which would explain why we always had terrible drainage issues with the lawn. The ground currently is a mess - concrete-like clay, tons of rocks, and root infiltration from an oak growing up on the hill. I want to dig 8 or so inches down and start working compost into the soil - hoping to do a winter crop of crimson clover to start healing the soil.