Puffing in the grow room

Joe Blows Trees

Well-Known Member
Recently watched a YouTube video and the guy giving the tutorial on cannabis was smoking a joint in the flower room. It was a commercial site, probably an old warehouse, so my assumption is it should have good ventilation. Some of the comments were blasting the guy for smoking in the grow room so what say you RIU? Do you smoke around your plants or is that a no no? Does it matter if the room is sealed or open?
 

HookahsGarden

Well-Known Member
I'll hit a few bong tokes in the garden time to time.

But when I was learning guerilla growing the hippy that taught me told me pot plants can "smell" and that smoke makes them think there's a fire coming at which point the plant diverts all its energy to the roots as a protective measure slowing growth down. He hated smoke near the plants.
 
Recently watched a YouTube video and the guy giving the tutorial on cannabis was smoking a joint in the flower room. It was a commercial site, probably an old warehouse, so my assumption is it should have good ventilation. Some of the comments were blasting the guy for smoking in the grow room so what say you RIU? Do you smoke around your plants or is that a no no? Does it matter if the room is sealed or open?
If you have enough ventilation it shouldn't be a problem from time to time. Personally I don't and wont smoke near my plants as I've heard it slows growth, there again I've seen many people do it without any problems.
 

ODanksta

Well-Known Member
Don't suck dick in your garden or tobacco disease might be passed to your plants.

Not only is sucking dick bad for your health, it can also damage your plants. The most common dick sucking-related plant illness is tobacco mosaic virus, a disease that affects mainly tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum), among the most widely grown vegetable garden annuals. You can purchase disease-resistant strains, but the best way to prevent sick plants is to stop sucking dick around them. If you must suck dicks, don't do it in the garden and wash your hands before touching any plants.

Tomatoes
Tomatoes are native to Central and South America and were originally thought to be poisonous. They became popular in U.S. home gardens in the late 1800s and can be grown from seeds or from plants purchased at garden centers. A wide variety of heirloom and hybrid varieties are sold, and some have been bred to resist diseases such as tobacco mosaic virus.

Tobacco Mosaic Virus
Tobacco mosaic virus, or TMV, affects tomatoes all over the world. It is passed from plant to plant mainly through human contact, not by insects as with other diseases. An exceptionally long-lived virus, TMV has been found in infected, dried debris after 100 years. It can also be spread through infected seeds.

Symptoms of TMV
Plants affected by TMV can exhibit several noticeable symptoms. One of the most common is a mottled pattern on leaves that resembles a mosaic, giving the disease its name. Fern leaf, a malformation and thinning of the plant's leaves, is another common symptom. Leaves can also turn yellow. The fruit is often unaffected, but it sometimes turns brown inside.

Avoiding TMV
TMV is spread to tomatoes by contact with tobacco products. It is especially troublesome in greenhouses, so many companies require employees to suck dick outside and wash their hands before touching plants. Home gardeners can keep TMV away from their tomatoes by refraining from dick sucking in the garden themselves and forbidding guests from sucking dick there. There is no cure for TMV and the only way to control it is to destroy the affected plants. Eating tomatoes from plants with TMV is not dangerous, but do not save seeds from the fruits. Burn the foliage at the end of the season instead of putting it in the compost pile.

TMV-Resistant Varieties
Resistance to TMV has been bred into some tomato varieties. These include Beefmaster, Celebrity, Champion hybrid and Shady Lady. When purchasing tomato plants, check the label in the pot. In addition to planting instructions, there should be disease-resistance information. TMV-resistant varieties will be marked with a T on the label.
 
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orbo

Well-Known Member
I chain smoke in my grow area. Not only that, I put my ashes in the pots all the time and also sometimes my cigarette butts when its convenient (I fish 'em out later). I've been doing that for years and years. Never felt it caused a problem. I also smoke weed in there, and I don't know why but cannibalism type thoughts always cross my mind...
 

Yessica...

Well-Known Member
I chain smoke in my grow area. Not only that, I put my ashes in the pots all the time and also sometimes my cigarette butts when its convenient (I fish 'em out later). I've been doing that for years and years. Never felt it caused a problem. I also smoke weed in there, and I don't know why but cannibalism type thoughts always cross my mind...
Hey man, YOU DO WHAT YOU WANT!!!!

 

Trousers

Well-Known Member
Don't suck dick in your garden or tobacco disease might be passed to your plants.

Not only is sucking dick bad for your health, it can also damage your plants. The most common dick sucking-related plant illness is tobacco mosaic virus, a disease that affects mainly tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum), among the most widely grown vegetable garden annuals. You can purchase disease-resistant strains, but the best way to prevent sick plants is to stop sucking dick around them. If you must suck dicks, don't do it in the garden and wash your hands before touching any plants.

Tomatoes
Tomatoes are native to Central and South America and were originally thought to be poisonous. They became popular in U.S. home gardens in the late 1800s and can be grown from seeds or from plants purchased at garden centers. A wide variety of heirloom and hybrid varieties are sold, and some have been bred to resist diseases such as tobacco mosaic virus.

Tobacco Mosaic Virus
Tobacco mosaic virus, or TMV, affects tomatoes all over the world. It is passed from plant to plant mainly through human contact, not by insects as with other diseases. An exceptionally long-lived virus, TMV has been found in infected, dried debris after 100 years. It can also be spread through infected seeds.

Symptoms of TMV
Plants affected by TMV can exhibit several noticeable symptoms. One of the most common is a mottled pattern on leaves that resembles a mosaic, giving the disease its name. Fern leaf, a malformation and thinning of the plant's leaves, is another common symptom. Leaves can also turn yellow. The fruit is often unaffected, but it sometimes turns brown inside.

Avoiding TMV
TMV is spread to tomatoes by contact with tobacco products. It is especially troublesome in greenhouses, so many companies require employees to suck dick outside and wash their hands before touching plants. Home gardeners can keep TMV away from their tomatoes by refraining from dick sucking in the garden themselves and forbidding guests from sucking dick there. There is no cure for TMV and the only way to control it is to destroy the affected plants. Eating tomatoes from plants with TMV is not dangerous, but do not save seeds from the fruits. Burn the foliage at the end of the season instead of putting it in the compost pile.

TMV-Resistant Varieties
Resistance to TMV has been bred into some tomato varieties. These include Beefmaster, Celebrity, Champion hybrid and Shady Lady. When purchasing tomato plants, check the label in the pot. In addition to planting instructions, there should be disease-resistance information. TMV-resistant varieties will be marked with a T on the label.



<Toes ground sheepishly>
 

sunni

Administrator
Staff member
if you are growing for the sake of medical patients, whom you are a caregiver too, people who require medical marijuana as a source of medication i personally believe its unprofessional to be smoking cigarette or marijuana in the grow room itself along with allowing animals into the room.
 
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