joe macclennan
Well-Known Member
welcome to online mj forums op
where you are sure to get your answers...but no two will be the same
where you are sure to get your answers...but no two will be the same
I resemble that remark....there are more than one way to skin a cat
ewww, don't google skinning cats photo....don't do it
So everybody is an expert....well by readings hundreds of post over the last year I'm worn out.
If you hang out on these forums you know what I mean. For every question there are multiple answers. For every guy that said this another guy said thats wrong. People post answers to questions that have no experience or a friend told them or I read that or he said this. Now this of course is not everybody but the vast majority of post are like that.
I do understand that there is more than one way to do it. People talking as if they are stating fact or giving out science as if they have a science degree in cannabis cultivation. Now there are folks that document there grows and share what they have learned from experience. Thats all good assuming that they are telling the truth.
So Where IS all the real science? Is it too early for science from labs about cultivation? Why is there nobody from working commercial growing facilities talking about the results they get?
The more I read the less I know. Please point me in the right direction if I just dont know where to find it. Im tired of the hearsay. I just want to learn more about growing with out the 95% BS filter on.
2[SUP]nd[/SUP] grow little guy
I clicked here to see what you had to say...You want my honest advice here? Quit listening to everyone else and only listen to me.
I AM AN EXPERT!!!!
or PK boosters work, or that de-chlorinating water is necessary or that Amber trichs give you couch-lock, or a 72 hour dark period before harvest works, or any number of things that you do to weed but runs horticultural contrary to every other known plant on the planet...
cal/mag.......m..
agree with everything else...cept this.-Don't feed clones
that's some interesting info. Where, may I ask, did you read it?If you studied the starch/sugar pathways in plants, you'd realize that high cellular inorganic P levels inhibits an enzyme called AGPase. AGPase is responsible for converting sugars into starches. Factors that regulate the level of AGPase are thus responsible for controlling the partitioning of photosynthetic flux. What this means is that a P deficiency toward harvest will cause your product to be more starchy. This is stuff most growers just aren't interested in despite being fascinating.. "How big will my yields be????"