IV potsmoking & M&D
rich
richard.romeo at gmail.com
Wed Aug 12 21:19:44 CDT 2009
see:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqbw748_qjE
lumber jack bunny
rich
>>
>>
>> From Mason & Dixon:
>>
>>
>> “In this Valley, plants,—Vegetables,—grow big,—very big. Big Corn. Each
>> Kernel’s more than a Man can lift. Big Turnip. Six-man crew to dig out but
>> one. Big Squash. Big enough for many families to eat their way into, and
>> then live inside all the Winter. Very big, BIG,—Hemp-Plant.” The Mohawk is
>> upon his feet, pretending to look in Astonishment at something nearly
>> straight overhead.…
>
> That's the passage. Perfect picture of a blooming cottage industry, don't
> you think?
>
> I visited an urban pot garden a year ago - a dozen plants tucked away in a
> plot roughly 100 feet square, sativa hybrids from 6 to 10 feet tall, behind
> somebody's house in the East Bay Hills. The grower hadn't spaced the plants
> quite far enough apart, so the main stems stretched and grew into an canopy
> with few side branches. We were able to get in under that canopy and
> meditate for awhile among what began to resemble a forest of green-barked
> trees -- some with "trunks" up to 2 inches or so in diameter -- beneath an
> umbrella of green. Had a chance to help with the Bubble Bags and trim,
> too, in a fun demonstration of cannabis geek tech, as described by Ed
> Rosenthal in his fine book, Marijuana Gold - Trash To Stash
> http://www.greenharvest.ca/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=22&products_id=65
>
> This year, that same grower planted fewer "girls", 9 instead of a dozen.
> Remains to be seen what the final results will be - the buds are just now
> beginning to develop, a process that will continue through September and
> into October. But this year, he's got bushy plants, lots of sticky side
> branches plus the canopy of colas above, and expects a greater yield than
> last year.
>
>
>
>
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