Hiding?

I am trying to get the soil ready and an area ready for my outdoor grow.

I already have indoor grows but in my veg room my plants are getting massive and I don't have the lighting to flower them right now or the space - so I'm forced to put them outdoors.


I live in the country, and it'll be along a fenceline. My concern is disguising it from the farmers who drive around. I don't mind keeping them under 5ft tall either.

I'm looking for ideas on how I can cover it up - by putting plants around it, setting up fences, etc.

I can send photos of the area I'll be using if you guys want to give me some ideas on what I can do.
 

Green Dave

Well-Known Member
:clap:Tie it to the fence and grow sideways instead of up maybe tie some fake flowers to it and make it look like something else:weed:
 

shizz

Well-Known Member
theres no wAY ur going to hide them from the farmer. not by planting or moving plants around to hide them. hell notice that right away its his job.
 

Shabang

Well-Known Member
I also live in the country and have done outdoor grows for the past two years with no problems. They were not in a fence row but were right on the edge of a field. If there are other shrubs/brush around it will not be as noticeable. The best thing I can tell you is to spread your plants out and not put them all in one spot. If you feel like the farmer will see them then don't plant there and find a better spot if possible. Also people will not notice the MJ plant unless they are looking for it and know what it looks like(unless it is flowering and SMELLS A LOT). Also do NOT disturb the ground around around your plants. Since you are growing indoors and transplanting outside dig a hole just big enough to fit the root ball and scatter the excess soil in the field(since your plants will already be taller than the surrounding grasses). I have always kept my plant 4 foot or shorter and they are not noticeable at all. If you want i can post some pics of previous grows to show you how well they blend in---unless your looking for them which most farmers aren't. Hope this helps. Blaze up!!!
 
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