Neikodog's High Brix Sativas

Yup the best learning tool is Experience, and WE really start to learn when there ARE problems,
Or the hard way, as you say :)

I was selling the first personal computers back in the early 80s, and did training for legal secretaries. WordPerfect. :cheesygrinsmiley: Command driven, 100s of macros to learn, but blazingly fast.

After awhile I stopped trying to teach them the commands until they actually had to use them. It was far more productive to take quick phone calls, than to try to lay it all out for them. You learn when you need to learn. Those are the answers you remember.

:bongrip:
 
I was selling the first personal computers back in the early 80s, and did training for legal secretaries. WordPerfect. :cheesygrinsmiley: Command driven, 100s of macros to learn, but blazingly fast.

After awhile I stopped trying to teach them the commands until they actually had to use them. It was far more productive to take quick phone calls, than to try to lay it all out for them. You learn when you need to learn. Those are the answers you remember.

:bongrip:

BTW I have sold the original IBM 5150 for a un-holy amount, sold my IBM DOS 1.0 (not 1.1) for 1k
So if you have any of that old junk $$$$
 
I was selling the first personal computers back in the early 80s, and did training for legal secretaries. WordPerfect. :cheesygrinsmiley: Command driven, 100s of macros to learn, but blazingly fast.

After awhile I stopped trying to teach them the commands until they actually had to use them. It was far more productive to take quick phone calls, than to try to lay it all out for them. You learn when you need to learn. Those are the answers you remember.

:bongrip:
i agree you on some things you just have to do it everytime i do a new grow i learn what I'm not going to do next time and what i want to start doing i seriously doubt that will ever change when you think you no it all your headed for failure,but i do want to say i like all the input from everyone i get ideas that way keep it up thanks!:thumb:
 
BTW I have sold the original IBM 5150 for a un-holy amount, sold my IBM DOS 1.0 (not 1.1) for 1k
So if you have any of that old junk $$$$

I do indeed have some of that old junk - never thought it could be worth anything. :hmmm: I'll have to rummage through it someday.
 
Oh guys I started from Intel 80286, I'm not even sure how many times I used IBM, but not many :laugh:

Ah no sorry I take that back it must've been ZX Spectrum :bong:
 
i was selling the first personal computers back in the early 80s, and did training for legal secretaries. Wordperfect. :cheesygrinsmiley: Command driven, 100s of macros to learn, but blazingly fast.

After awhile i stopped trying to teach them the commands until they actually had to use them. It was far more productive to take quick phone calls, than to try to lay it all out for them. You learn when you need to learn. Those are the answers you remember.

:bongrip:

Trs-80?
 
You learn when you need to learn. Those are the answers you remember.

:bongrip:

This was the principle I applied when homeschooling our children. You wouldn't believe how redundant the elementary curriculum is these days. It's mostly to waste time. We cut all of that out and went to learning what you needed right now. Worked really well for both of them. :cheesygrinsmiley:
 

Heheh, I missed that one. I was just about to pull the trigger when the PC hit the market. 8 inch floppies. :laugh:

I had a IBM 8088 PC, then an ATT 8086 with a color monitor and card, then IBM AT ... went to generic AMDs from there - 80286, 80586 ... stopped being fun after that.
 
Hey Neiko, on the Panamas, donthey start running out in week 10? I'm closing out 10 today and they are crissssssppyyyy!!! Well they were before cleaned them up lol. Couldn't really take looking at them like that anymore. Thought since I was reading up about sativas I'd ask ya real quick ..
 
Hey Neiko, on the Panamas, donthey start running out in week 10? I'm closing out 10 today and they are crissssssppyyyy!!! Well they were before cleaned them up lol. Couldn't really take looking at them like that anymore. Thought since I was reading up about sativas I'd ask ya real quick ..

Yes they start fading about then, I think my panamas were done at about week 12. Just pull the cooked leaves. Just go by the calyxes and pistols to tell when they are done. Don't worry about the leaves at this point they are spent. My Dr. Grinspoon's leaves have all crispied up and turned yellow, you know you're getting close.
 
I feel like she's not pushing many more pistols at all and the calyxes I'm not to sure about, just wonder if you run them as normal or if you add anything this late?
 
Interesting, is using GE throughout the end a practice you use a lot? I'm starting week 11 today.l so maybe two weeks but they really are drinking just the same. I haven't seen them slow down there just yet. I think they look good though
420-magazine-mobile625291408.jpg
 
Hey 7 , Neiko and friends,...ya 7 , Neiko is most correct in his practice of giving them lots of GE toward the end. With my BT's , they got two or three GE Drenches during the last couple weeks. Always finish up with GE. Helps to sweeten the produce as opposed to Transplant.
cheers eh!....BTW ...very tasty looking buds sir! love me some good HB Panama! prolly my fav. ..next to Doc's Lemon Paki..of course!:grinjoint:
 
Yes they start fading about then, I think my panamas were done at about week 12. Just pull the cooked leaves. Just go by the calyxes and pistols to tell when they are done. Don't worry about the leaves at this point they are spent. My Dr. Grinspoon's leaves have all crispied up and turned yellow, you know you're getting close.

my Panamas ranged mostly from 9+ to 10, 11 weeks, with reduced light schedules..
I experienced fades too. I attribute it to now mostly to smaller than suggested pots, and experimenting. :)
 
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