Heady Intentions
Member
Howdy folks, I'll be starting my 2013 season thread today and will be frequently updating as the season goes along... I'm new to the site so I'll give you guys a quick bio before I start with the thread. I'm a grower from the North East, snowboard/skateboard on my off time (when I'm not gardening), and have recently been inspired by a new book I picked up over the winter called "Guerrilla Growing Trade Secrets" by Vinnie Kaz. It's a 300+ pager PACKED with insider tips and how-to's when taking it to the bush for your outdoor crops.
This is where a lot of my knowledge is coming from, aside from the previous 8 years growing up to this point. Gardening is my true passion though, so I take a lot of pride in what I do and so should you. It's not an easy task, you guys gotta agree with me when I say it's more than frustrating when people take what we do as just tossing seeds in miracle grow and watching the plants grow. There's a lot more to it than that as you know...
Anyways, enough babbling. I'll get down to the topic at hand here - GUERRILLA GROWING. I'm taking it to the swamps this year, planting in 3-4 different sites with roughly 20 plants per site. I'll be using swamp tubes for my pots, cutting down visits without the necessity of watering my plants (ever). For those that don't know - a swamp tube is a bottomless pot that sits in standing swamp water and feeds the plant using a wicking system; making it possible for me to never have to visit sites to water.
I made mine out of chicken wire to keep em light, then wrapped them with meshed tarp inside & out to act like a big fabric pot. I'll be staking each tube down in the swamp to prevent top-heavy plants from falling over later in the budding season. This is one of the sites that I'll be using - it's more of a bog but any wetland that will stay flooded throughout the summer will be sufficient.
Swamps one-up bogs because they almost always contain a mineralized soil base - creating enormous plants and surrounding foliage that acts as camo for our beloved plants. I have another swamp site that I haven't photographed yet, but updates will be coming soon of that site.
Wetlands are dangerous. I've seen deer, snapping turtles, beavers, snakes, and ticks all over these places. ^ This place is CRAWLING with ticks. Good for deterring humans, bad for guerrillas like you and me. To protect myself from ticks (and Lyme Disease) I purchased a 6 pack of disposable full-body suits:
http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/DUPONT-Hooded-Disposable-Coveralls-4T050?Pid=search
I spray painted mine in camo patterns since their BRIGHT white lol. I'll see upwards of 30-40 ticks on these things before I unzip it at the car and put it in my backpack. That's 30-40 ticks that would be on and under my skin by the end of the drive home. I take one of those lint rollers and get as many off me as I can before throwing it in my backpack, then I toss it in the dryer on high heat when I get home to kill the few that I might have missed. They make my skin crawl, literally. Aside from tick prevention, my main concern are the venomous snakes out there. The only other real concern besides them are sink holes or "false floors" created from beaver dams or other animals' dens that they make underwater. These can make 1' deep water turn into 7' deep in a matter of steps. To prevent from falling through in over my head AND to deter the snakes, I carry a probing stick (any long branch I can find) and poke the ground I'm about to treck on. After poking, I'll tap any surrounding trees with the stick so snakes hear me coming. They're relatively shy and will slither away unless youre encroaching their nest or are trying to harm them. They still make me paranoid sometimes though, especially because I'm a lone-wolf out there since I don't have a grow partner this year. A bite from the wrong kind of snake will leave you curled up in a ball far away from any help available, so be cautious when wading around in the wetlands guys.
Strains:I'm running a lot of randoms this year, as well as a hand full of Auto's that I received as freebies from seed banks. I won't list all the strains but my main ones include:
Blue widow
C99
Critical Hog
Sweet Island Skunk
Vintage 2006
Critical Kali Mist
I spent a good amount of time this winter researching high producing/mold-resistant strains that should do pretty well in the swamp this year. I have high hopes for these guys, so I'm cloning them like crazy and trying to up my numbers before transplant time comes in a month (June 1st), while keeping my number count under 99. I'm not sure how many pictures we can upload in one post on this site so I'll continue this thread below.
This is where a lot of my knowledge is coming from, aside from the previous 8 years growing up to this point. Gardening is my true passion though, so I take a lot of pride in what I do and so should you. It's not an easy task, you guys gotta agree with me when I say it's more than frustrating when people take what we do as just tossing seeds in miracle grow and watching the plants grow. There's a lot more to it than that as you know...
Anyways, enough babbling. I'll get down to the topic at hand here - GUERRILLA GROWING. I'm taking it to the swamps this year, planting in 3-4 different sites with roughly 20 plants per site. I'll be using swamp tubes for my pots, cutting down visits without the necessity of watering my plants (ever). For those that don't know - a swamp tube is a bottomless pot that sits in standing swamp water and feeds the plant using a wicking system; making it possible for me to never have to visit sites to water.
I made mine out of chicken wire to keep em light, then wrapped them with meshed tarp inside & out to act like a big fabric pot. I'll be staking each tube down in the swamp to prevent top-heavy plants from falling over later in the budding season. This is one of the sites that I'll be using - it's more of a bog but any wetland that will stay flooded throughout the summer will be sufficient.
Swamps one-up bogs because they almost always contain a mineralized soil base - creating enormous plants and surrounding foliage that acts as camo for our beloved plants. I have another swamp site that I haven't photographed yet, but updates will be coming soon of that site.
Wetlands are dangerous. I've seen deer, snapping turtles, beavers, snakes, and ticks all over these places. ^ This place is CRAWLING with ticks. Good for deterring humans, bad for guerrillas like you and me. To protect myself from ticks (and Lyme Disease) I purchased a 6 pack of disposable full-body suits:
http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/DUPONT-Hooded-Disposable-Coveralls-4T050?Pid=search
I spray painted mine in camo patterns since their BRIGHT white lol. I'll see upwards of 30-40 ticks on these things before I unzip it at the car and put it in my backpack. That's 30-40 ticks that would be on and under my skin by the end of the drive home. I take one of those lint rollers and get as many off me as I can before throwing it in my backpack, then I toss it in the dryer on high heat when I get home to kill the few that I might have missed. They make my skin crawl, literally. Aside from tick prevention, my main concern are the venomous snakes out there. The only other real concern besides them are sink holes or "false floors" created from beaver dams or other animals' dens that they make underwater. These can make 1' deep water turn into 7' deep in a matter of steps. To prevent from falling through in over my head AND to deter the snakes, I carry a probing stick (any long branch I can find) and poke the ground I'm about to treck on. After poking, I'll tap any surrounding trees with the stick so snakes hear me coming. They're relatively shy and will slither away unless youre encroaching their nest or are trying to harm them. They still make me paranoid sometimes though, especially because I'm a lone-wolf out there since I don't have a grow partner this year. A bite from the wrong kind of snake will leave you curled up in a ball far away from any help available, so be cautious when wading around in the wetlands guys.
Strains:I'm running a lot of randoms this year, as well as a hand full of Auto's that I received as freebies from seed banks. I won't list all the strains but my main ones include:
Blue widow
C99
Critical Hog
Sweet Island Skunk
Vintage 2006
Critical Kali Mist
I spent a good amount of time this winter researching high producing/mold-resistant strains that should do pretty well in the swamp this year. I have high hopes for these guys, so I'm cloning them like crazy and trying to up my numbers before transplant time comes in a month (June 1st), while keeping my number count under 99. I'm not sure how many pictures we can upload in one post on this site so I'll continue this thread below.
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