Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed Stock

Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Me and my buddy got stopped while walking down the road one night. They stopped us due to another friend being hammered and jumping into the road while cars were going by. Anyways we were smoking a bowl while walking and they smelt us and so searched us. We each had a quarter of commercial smoke on us and the cop was checking it out under his spot light asking if it was any good. We said it was ok and he started giving us shit about having crappy weed at which point we both made sure to defend what we had. He offered us a ride into town since both of our cars were 3 towns over and we were in the middle of no where. When we got into the car he took both of our bags and put them in his center console. After he does that he looks back at both of us and says "looks like i wont have to buy any this week!" My buddy tried getting him to hang out at a later date and burn with him but the cop wasnt having it.

Yea they get high just like everyone else, they dont fool no one! .
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Yea they get high just like everyone else, they dont fool no one! .

I was just surprised that he openly admitted it to us. I know of a kid who's dad was a cop in that same town and he ended up with all sorts of glass that his dad confiscated and gave to him.
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Yeah I've been thinking. The line dividing hemp from marijuana or cannabis non-drug cultivars from drug cultivars is really an arbitrary one. Both in US and EU hemp is defined as cannabis that produces up to 0,3% THC. You bring down THC in Cannatonic or any other modern CBD strain to that level for the sake of bringing CBD up and technically you have hemp. We also know that Chinese already figured out that cannabis can be selectively inbred for different characteristics at least 5 thousand years ago. But in order to keep the traits you're after you have to constantly stay on the watch, so if you want your THC up the sky you have to select for these individuals in subsequent generations, F1, F2, F3, F4 and so on and vice versa with CBD, cause cannabis has natural tendency to balance both chemicals. They're so close in the DNA chain (and the only difference is one hydrogen bond), that there's no way to silent one permanently without genetic manipulation. There's actually a drift of certified hemp from F1 to F2 and onward towards more THC production and even commercially developed seed might produce plants that will get to 2% THC during hot summer. My theory is that even if Spaniards brought hemp to Colombia in 16th century there was no way they could've stabilised their line against THC drift and there you go after 100 years suddenly Colombian Gold pops out somewhere in the mountains and everybody starts getting higher and higher while the cultivar becomes stronger and stronger through selective inbreeding :smokin:

All Cannabis drifts when grown in a different location and from whatever it is grown for, hemp, seed, oil, or colas. Hemp drifts constantly as well as Marijuana. If you make the DEA distinction between them, which I do not. I am also in the 'one botanical species' camp. Its all Cannabis sativa to me, and then 3 to 5 sub species. I have read that early hemp growers in Kentucky noted that hemp crops would drift to crappy fiber short plants and produce more seeds if you were not diligent in constantly selecting the best plants for seed. A similar thing was recorded by Arjan in one of his land race search films in Africa, where the locals tell him that the seeds from Amsterdam drift in about 3-4 years when the potency noticeably declines, and they have to get new seed stock every few years to counteract the drift. Apparently they lack the knowledge of how to maintain the strain by parent selection, or how to clone the F1 seed grows. So there is ample evidence that hemp/Marijuana/Cannabis naturalizes and degrades in quality for whatever you are growing it for. Cannabis has a wide genetic diversity, and naturalizes rapidly.

In Mexico at least there was an intentional split between Manila hemp and psychoactive Marihuana. Several Spanish colonies in Latin America grew hemp for fiber from about 1500 and on. But the indigenous people of what would become Mexico and Guatemala figured out that hemp colas could get you high, and apparently early on. They revered psychotropic plants in Mezzo America. They had a long botanical list of them in Mayan and Aztec culture. Anyway, the Catholic Church frowned on that, so it went sub-culture pretty fast. Hemp was grown overtly in fields for sail cloth and rope, and land races were established in out of the way plots grown for the colas. The Mezzo Americans used the dried colas in teas, and for that reason I believe many SW Mexican strains developed a distinct mint flavor to them. In tea that was great. In smoke I find the mint flavor to be too strong in some of my land race seed strains. Anyway, by the 18th century, botanists doing field research in the Spanish colonies asked the natives what they were growing for using in the marihuana teas, and they showed the botanists flowering hemp. The botanists noted it, but dismissed it out of hand. The botanists simply did not realize the distinction between hemp and marihuana colas. If they were drinking steeped hemp flowers, so what? It was not really until smoking of marihuana became popular to get high at the end of the 19th century in Mexico that anyone noted that there was any difference, and marijuana became likened to smoking hashish and opium globally. Pancho Villa was famous for getting high on weed. After the Mexican Revolution in 1910, the Marijuana banning began in the states starting with California in 1913, and in Mexico in 1925.

The commercial significance of hemp growing was not lost in that though, and during WWII hemp planting by farmers was mandated by the US government. I believe that the critical fiber requirement for hemp during WWII may have started the ramp up of growing hemp in other places, particularly in places like the Caribbean and in Colombia. That may have triggered the Colombian Gold rush planting in Santa Marta in 1945. By then the Panama Canal had long since been open, and the route to Southeast Asia was wide open. Actually that area became a funnel for shipped cargo starting in 1914.
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

I think you guys might be getting a bit written history focussed when talking about cannabis in the americas.

Once people discover cannabis, it's the kind of thing they like to keep around. People discovered cannabis and beer thousands of years ago.

The Spanish deliberately destroyed every pre-columbian record they could find, so the written history of the americas is artificially short.

If I were a gambling man, I'd bet cannabis pre-dated the european invasion of the americas - but I have no evidence of that.
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

I think you guys might be getting a bit written history focussed when talking about cannabis in the americas.

Once people discover cannabis, it's the kind of thing they like to keep around. People discovered cannabis and beer thousands of years ago.

The Spanish deliberately destroyed every pre-columbian record they could find, so the written history of the americas is artificially short.

If I were a gambling man, I'd bet cannabis pre-dated the european invasion of the americas - but I have no evidence of that.


Interesting hypothesis, but I would take your bet on this. While Cannabis could have been taken to North America with the migrating humans from Asia during the latest last ice ages (they were also here well before that, from Europe, the Clovis people who were wiped out by a Canadian comet trajectory and strike about 12k years ago), those two cultures were generally hunter gatherers, and not cultivators or farmers until later. I also have to refute your statement about the short history of America. There were and are records of Aztec and Mayan herbal remedies and medicine that remain. Much of that was carved in stone. Not everything was destroyed by the Spanish, and there were and remain extensive observational records made by the Spanish when they came to the Americas. I have read through many of the original records at San Diego State University, where I got my degrees in engineering. There are large written cashes of early Spanish written records in the University library there (SDSU has the mascot of The Aztecs, and they take it to heart). I also took several pre-Colombian history courses there, as well as botany classes, one specifically on North American pre-Colombian native plants used as medicines.

Cannabis simply dose not show up in any pre-Colombian records or excavations in North or South America, nor is there any evidence of it in any pre-Colombian tombs or excavations. The Mayan records are extensive, and were completely overgrown by the time the Conquistadors arrived. No record there or in Aztec or Inca records or excavations either. Cannabis is an old world plant, not new. Tomatoes, potatoes, cocoa, chilli peppers, vanilla, tobacco, bananas, corn, pumpkins, gourds and other new world plants were rapidly gathered by the Spanish and taken back to Europe and subsequently exploited, exported and grown worldwide. They also brought with them old world plants. As early as Columbus' second voyage to Hispaniola/Cuba in 1493, seeds and cuttings of 20 plant varieties were recorded, including barley, wheat, leeks, beets, onions, radishes, cucumbers, broad beans, citrus fruits, olives, melons, parsley, sugar cane, and grape vines. These people were prepared to colonize the world, and very early on.

Hemp was a CRITICAL agricultural product to both the Spanish and Portuguese sailing ship empires, and they would have certainly recorded hemp being in the new world if they were to have stumbled upon it. They did not. They brought hemp with them. I also have never seen or heard of any archeological finds or fossil records that hemp was here before or during the last ice ages, as many other plants were that became extinct here before the arrival of humans to the western hemisphere. They (the indigenous cultures) had a whole array of plants that they exploited though. They made land races of potatoes, chillis and corn, and permanently altered their genetics. They fermented several plants, including cocoa and particularly vanilla which is a rather complex process to make vanilla beans. If you look at the records, there was an explosion of Cannabis in Africa and the new world with a benchmark of about 1500 when Spain and Portugal conquered the world.
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Interesting hypothesis, but I would take your bet on this. While Cannabis could have been taken to North America with the migrating humans from Asia during the latest last ice ages (they were also here well before that, from Europe, the Clovis people who were wiped out by a Canadian comet trajectory and strike about 12k years ago), those two cultures were generally hunter gatherers, and not cultivators or farmers until later. I also have to refute your statement about the short history of America. There were and are records of Aztec and Mayan herbal remedies and medicine that remain. Much of that was carved in stone. Not everything was destroyed by the Spanish, and there were and remain extensive observational records made by the Spanish when they came to the Americas. I have read through many of the original records at San Diego State University, where I got my degrees in engineering. There are large written cashes of early Spanish written records in the University library there (SDSU has the mascot of The Aztecs, and they take it to heart). I also took several pre-Colombian history courses there, as well as botany classes, one specifically on North American pre-Colombian native plants used as medicines.

Cannabis simply dose not show up in any pre-Colombian records or excavations in North or South America, nor is there any evidence of it in any pre-Colombian tombs or excavations. The Mayan records are extensive, and were completely overgrown by the time the Conquistadors arrived. No record there or in Aztec or Inca records or excavations either. Cannabis is an old world plant, not new. Tomatoes, potatoes, cocoa, chilli peppers, vanilla, tobacco, bananas, corn, pumpkins, gourds and other new world plants were rapidly gathered by the Spanish and taken back to Europe and subsequently exploited, exported and grown worldwide. They also brought with them old world plants. As early as Columbus’ second voyage to Hispaniola/Cuba in 1493, seeds and cuttings of 20 plant varieties were recorded, including barley, wheat, leeks, beets, onions, radishes, cucumbers, broad beans, citrus fruits, olives, melons, parsley, sugar cane, and grape vines. These people were prepared to colonize the world, and very early on.

Hemp was a CRITICAL agricultural product to both the Spanish and Portuguese sailing ship empires, and they would have certainly recorded hemp being in the new world if they were to have stumbled upon it. They did not. They brought hemp with them. I also have never seen or heard of any archeological finds or fossil records that hemp was here before or during the last ice ages, as many other plants were that became extinct here before the arrival of humans to the western hemisphere. They (the indigenous cultures) had a whole array of plants that they exploited though. They made land races of potatoes, chillis and corn, and permanently altered their genetics. They fermented several plants, including cocoa and particularly vanilla which is a rather complex process to make vanilla beans. If you look at the records, there was an explosion of Cannabis in Africa and the new world with a benchmark of about 1500 when Spain and Portugal conquered the world.

You make excellent points. I'd forgotten about all those Mayan Stellae.

- -

One of the things I find interesting is that aparrently it was the Africans who introduced pipe smoking of cannabis. Yet the Americas had pipe smoking too.

The record of what was smoked in pipes in the Americas seems surprisingly poor. Given the United States mania against cannabis, and the source of continuing funding for digs, I have to assume cannabis discovered by an American archaelogist might go unreported in peer reviewed journals and remain buried in original journals. (buried <== :rofl:)
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Just a drive by my friend... Never learnt to read so I'm alittle too brain-dead, and that requires thinking... I'll come back for the illustrations. Oh was it time for the CG to come down? And how long did she take.? Had them running buds, least what I call them. Well I'm outta here.
Keepem Green

I appreciate it, man. She was chopped and this bud has already something very interesting going on. Pics are coming up!

Me and my buddy got stopped while walking down the road one night. They stopped us due to another friend being hammered and jumping into the road while cars were going by. Anyways we were smoking a bowl while walking and they smelt us and so searched us. We each had a quarter of commercial smoke on us and the cop was checking it out under his spot light asking if it was any good. We said it was ok and he started giving us shit about having crappy weed at which point we both made sure to defend what we had. He offered us a ride into town since both of our cars were 3 towns over and we were in the middle of no where. When we got into the car he took both of our bags and put them in his center console. After he does that he looks back at both of us and says "looks like i wont have to buy any this week!" My buddy tried getting him to hang out at a later date and burn with him but the cop wasnt having it.

Great story, man :laughtwo:

good morning conrad,hope everything is good,first i just want to say how much i appreciate you taking me under your wing sort a speak thank you if there is ever anything i can do for you please ask that being said i will post a few pics of the progress i think there doing well the first pic is skunk then super hash,and two gorilla glue,then i wanted to show you what container i will use for my next grow it is a 12x12x12 cube cloth pot that fits rite into this milk crate i got at home depot it's vented well on all sides and bottom with handles all around i think it could work good!
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They look very good, so just make sure to keep up what you're doing :thumb:

Yea they get high just like everyone else, they dont fool no one! .

Yeah they never fooled me.

I was just surprised that he openly admitted it to us. I know of a kid who's dad was a cop in that same town and he ended up with all sorts of glass that his dad confiscated and gave to him.

Good deal I'd say.

Back in the day it was common

I heard about 70s :smokin:

Yeah this was less than 10 years ago. So most all cruisers have dash cams. I would not think they would admit it where they could be recorded and heard

They definitely didn't care.

You would think not anyway.

Cops are funny beasts, they have to keep up appearances for the society that pays their salaries, but I never believed they were better than anyone else. Actually I never trusted LE for most of these folks go and do their job only to get high on power.
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

All Cannabis drifts when grown in a different location and from whatever it is grown for, hemp, seed, oil, or colas. Hemp drifts constantly as well as Marijuana. If you make the DEA distinction between them, which I do not. I am also in the 'one botanical species' camp. Its all Cannabis sativa to me, and then 3 to 5 sub species. I have read that early hemp growers in Kentucky noted that hemp crops would drift to crappy fiber short plants and produce more seeds if you were not diligent in constantly selecting the best plants for seed. A similar thing was recorded by Arjan in one of his land race search films in Africa, where the locals tell him that the seeds from Amsterdam drift in about 3-4 years when the potency noticeably declines, and they have to get new seed stock every few years to counteract the drift. Apparently they lack the knowledge of how to maintain the strain by parent selection, or how to clone the F1 seed grows. So there is ample evidence that hemp/Marijuana/Cannabis naturalizes and degrades in quality for whatever you are growing it for. Cannabis has a wide genetic diversity, and naturalizes rapidly.

In Mexico at least there was an intentional split between Manila hemp and psychoactive Marihuana. Several Spanish colonies in Latin America grew hemp for fiber from about 1500 and on. But the indigenous people of what would become Mexico and Guatemala figured out that hemp colas could get you high, and apparently early on. They revered psychotropic plants in Mezzo America. They had a long botanical list of them in Mayan and Aztec culture. Anyway, the Catholic Church frowned on that, so it went sub-culture pretty fast. Hemp was grown overtly in fields for sail cloth and rope, and land races were established in out of the way plots grown for the colas. The Mezzo Americans used the dried colas in teas, and for that reason I believe many SW Mexican strains developed a distinct mint flavor to them. In tea that was great. In smoke I find the mint flavor to be too strong in some of my land race seed strains. Anyway, by the 18th century, botanists doing field research in the Spanish colonies asked the natives what they were growing for using in the marihuana teas, and they showed the botanists flowering hemp. The botanists noted it, but dismissed it out of hand. The botanists simply did not realize the distinction between hemp and marihuana colas. If they were drinking steeped hemp flowers, so what? It was not really until smoking of marihuana became popular to get high at the end of the 19th century in Mexico that anyone noted that there was any difference, and marijuana became likened to smoking hashish and opium globally. Pancho Villa was famous for getting high on weed. After the Mexican Revolution in 1910, the Marijuana banning began in the states starting with California in 1913, and in Mexico in 1925.

The commercial significance of hemp growing was not lost in that though, and during WWII hemp planting by farmers was mandated by the US government. I believe that the critical fiber requirement for hemp during WWII may have started the ramp up of growing hemp in other places, particularly in places like the Caribbean and in Colombia. That may have triggered the Colombian Gold rush planting in Santa Marta in 1945. By then the Panama Canal had long since been open, and the route to Southeast Asia was wide open. Actually that area became a funnel for shipped cargo starting in 1914.

Word, man!

I think you guys might be getting a bit written history focussed when talking about cannabis in the americas.

Once people discover cannabis, it's the kind of thing they like to keep around. People discovered cannabis and beer thousands of years ago.

The Spanish deliberately destroyed every pre-columbian record they could find, so the written history of the americas is artificially short.

If I were a gambling man, I'd bet cannabis pre-dated the european invasion of the americas - but I have no evidence of that.


Yeah it didn't, except a strange fact that scientists don't really know how to debunk, the case of Peruvian mummies dated from 500 to 1500 AD that had cannabinoids found in their hair.

hey conrad how are you today,i thought i would send you a link to my thread it's where i and other gowers post there favorite pics and if you needed to contact me you could!Sticky's bud pics

I'm gonna check it out :thumb:

Interesting hypothesis, but I would take your bet on this. While Cannabis could have been taken to North America with the migrating humans from Asia during the latest last ice ages (they were also here well before that, from Europe, the Clovis people who were wiped out by a Canadian comet trajectory and strike about 12k years ago), those two cultures were generally hunter gatherers, and not cultivators or farmers until later. I also have to refute your statement about the short history of America. There were and are records of Aztec and Mayan herbal remedies and medicine that remain. Much of that was carved in stone. Not everything was destroyed by the Spanish, and there were and remain extensive observational records made by the Spanish when they came to the Americas. I have read through many of the original records at San Diego State University, where I got my degrees in engineering. There are large written cashes of early Spanish written records in the University library there (SDSU has the mascot of The Aztecs, and they take it to heart). I also took several pre-Colombian history courses there, as well as botany classes, one specifically on North American pre-Colombian native plants used as medicines.

Cannabis simply dose not show up in any pre-Colombian records or excavations in North or South America, nor is there any evidence of it in any pre-Colombian tombs or excavations. The Mayan records are extensive, and were completely overgrown by the time the Conquistadors arrived. No record there or in Aztec or Inca records or excavations either. Cannabis is an old world plant, not new. Tomatoes, potatoes, cocoa, chilli peppers, vanilla, tobacco, bananas, corn, pumpkins, gourds and other new world plants were rapidly gathered by the Spanish and taken back to Europe and subsequently exploited, exported and grown worldwide. They also brought with them old world plants. As early as Columbus’ second voyage to Hispaniola/Cuba in 1493, seeds and cuttings of 20 plant varieties were recorded, including barley, wheat, leeks, beets, onions, radishes, cucumbers, broad beans, citrus fruits, olives, melons, parsley, sugar cane, and grape vines. These people were prepared to colonize the world, and very early on.

Hemp was a CRITICAL agricultural product to both the Spanish and Portuguese sailing ship empires, and they would have certainly recorded hemp being in the new world if they were to have stumbled upon it. They did not. They brought hemp with them. I also have never seen or heard of any archeological finds or fossil records that hemp was here before or during the last ice ages, as many other plants were that became extinct here before the arrival of humans to the western hemisphere. They (the indigenous cultures) had a whole array of plants that they exploited though. They made land races of potatoes, chillis and corn, and permanently altered their genetics. They fermented several plants, including cocoa and particularly vanilla which is a rather complex process to make vanilla beans. If you look at the records, there was an explosion of Cannabis in Africa and the new world with a benchmark of about 1500 when Spain and Portugal conquered the world.

Yes fossil pollen, which usually point to cannabis cultivation, is nowhere to be found in pre-Columbian America, so it's hard to actually prove it was grown by the indigenous hunters-gatherers. Cannabis basically starts being present in Central and Eastern Asia at the beginning on Neolithic Age around 12 thousand years ago according to newest archaeological finds carried around by nomadic tribes that traded it as a valuable commodity, used it as a medicine and in funerary rituals. This doesn't mean they domesticated it as nomads usually move around quite a lot, but it means they knew its habitat and most likely knew when it finished flowering, so they could've been just coming in September/October to pick mature flowers wherever it grew, so they had their stash for the next year. But they might've been growing it with little maintenance too, which we know very well can be done. With time obviously the plant got domesticated by a tribe or a bunch of tribes living off the land and after it was established as a crop it usually coexisted with other agricultural staples like hops (it's genetic sister), flax, rye and few other ones at least 5,000 BC as we know from field excavations. A lot of holes in our knowledge still waits to be filled, but clearly cannabis and modern civilization are intrinsically linked.

You make excellent points. I'd forgotten about all those Mayan Stellae.

- -

One of the things I find interesting is that aparrently it was the Africans who introduced pipe smoking of cannabis. Yet the Americas had pipe smoking too.

The record of what was smoked in pipes in the Americas seems surprisingly poor. Given the United States mania against cannabis, and the source of continuing funding for digs, I have to assume cannabis discovered by an American archaelogist might go unreported in peer reviewed journals and remain buried in original journals. (buried <== :rofl:)

Actually we know that Scythians had already been using bongs :)
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

It seems I have a lot of seaweed to smoke BTW :)

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:high-five:
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Not yet :)
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

I am glad you enjoyed the story Conrad! Ya I have never thought of cops as better than people but I would think they would be better at covering their asses. All the cops in that town cover each other anyways.I had a buddy that got hauled behind a cruiser by a cop that proceeded to jack the kids arm up behind his back and put the elbows to him. When my buddy called the station the cops told him they were there and it never happened... typical. That looks like some decent seaweed you have to smoke there :thumb:
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

You make excellent points. I'd forgotten about all those Mayan Stellae.

- -

One of the things I find interesting is that aparrently it was the Africans who introduced pipe smoking of cannabis. Yet the Americas had pipe smoking too.

The record of what was smoked in pipes in the Americas seems surprisingly poor. Given the United States mania against cannabis, and the source of continuing funding for digs, I have to assume cannabis discovered by an American archaelogist might go unreported in peer reviewed journals and remain buried in original journals. (buried <== :rofl:)

Yeah, I have always wondered why the indigenous populations in Mexico drank infused Cannabis instead of smoking it early on (circa 1500), when tobacco was smoked here long before Columbus arrived. The Mayans carved drawings in stone show tobacco smoking between the 7th to 10th century. It was more of a ceremonial thing though, and not done every day. More like cigars I guess? I doubt that there was a coverup regarding Cannabis in any archeological digs, as it was not illegal in the US until 1937. And hemp was so common in the colonial period in North America, and even mandated to grow by farmers during WWII. So while the Nixon induced laws and politics are rather insane now, they were not always like this. Also in the 1970s it was almost legal, at least in California under Carter. Anyone would have jumped all over on early Cannabis use in pre-Columbian North/Central/South America and written many dissertations. The Olmec, Maya, Zapotec, Mixtec, Toltec, Tarascan and Aztec (and Incas) had a LOT of psychotropic drugs. They certainly got high. Now the Catholic Church was down on all of that, as they remain today. The fukkers.

The Vikings (my ancestors) certainly had hemp rope and sail cloth, and they came as far south as Labrador circa 1000 AD. But there is no evidence that they grew hemp there, and if they did it likely went extinct. They basically got their asses kicked by the native populations in Canada at that time and went back to Greenland and Iceland.
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Hey Conrad, great convo going on here. I can't wait to hear your smoke report. I was just wondering if you've seen the thread for lo and slo drying? Dr. Ziggy started this trend. I got to try some of his lo and slo dried weed and it is fantastic. So far everyone that has tried it says they won't dry the "normal" way again. I'm going to give it a try with some of my Jamaican that is next to come down.

DrZiggy's Low And Slow Drying: Maximizing Your Harvest
 
Re: Conradino23's Another Outdoor Grow With High Brix Soil - Air-Pots & SoCal Seed St

Hey Conrad, great convo going on here. I can't wait to hear your smoke report. I was just wondering if you've seen the thread for lo and slo drying? Dr. Ziggy started this trend. I got to try some of his lo and slo dried weed and it is fantastic. So far everyone that has tried it says they won't dry the "normal" way again. I'm going to give it a try with some of my Jamaican that is next to come down.

DrZiggy's Low And Slow Drying: Maximizing Your Harvest

neiko i have tried this and i love it the finished buds are quite different from the conventional way we usually do it even the texture imo is different and i believe it smokes smoother with that said here's what im not thrilled about my refer still smells like weed and it's been a month now the refer i used was in the garage and the smell from some gorilla glue i grew was wafting out into the front yard where everyone could smell it so had to put deoderizers around the garage and that really helped my wife would never have let me do in the kitchen fridge if i were going to do it again and i will i want to hang it in there so it dries nice and tight!
 
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