THE CANNABIS THREAD 101!!

Does anyone remember anytime that cock sucker spoke out against the drugs distributed by Reagan and Bush Sr? Did he ever protest the opioids that are and have been unleashed on US citizens by drug companies? Does that little shit even own a few free rehab centers?
 
If it is a gateway drug then that path goes in both directions. I used to have a serious drinking problem but smoking more weed help me to give up alcohol. On February 19th it'll be ten years since I last hit the bottle.

Oh I used to drink, when I was drinking I was totally different person!! I got a blood clot and was put on blood thinners and was told to give up all forms of booze!! That was almost 13yrs ago. To be honest the only reason I started drinking was because all my jobs I got pissed test all the damn time. So a blood clot was my end all with booze and now I cant stand the scent of booze and I can spot someone drunk a mile away and when I see them I go the opposite way!!

Congrats on the 10yrs and I wish another 10+yrs of staying away for the juice!!
 
I still can't find any rehab centers in his name but I did find this article. Can't wait to see which states, cites and or towns get the money.


Michael Bloomberg To Spend $50 Million to Fight Addiction
By Kelly Burch 12/05/18
Michael Bloomberg wrote about his intentions to fight the opioid epidemic in the 10 states hit hardest by it in a recent op-ed.

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Former New York City mayor and billionaire Michael Bloomberg announced that he will spend $50 million to fight the opioid epidemic, focusing on 10 states that are hardest-hit by drug overdoses.

“The opioid epidemic is a national health crisis of historic proportion. Yet the federal government is still not tackling it with the urgency it requires,” Bloomberg wrote in an op-ed for USA Today. “What's truly needed is a comprehensive strategy that includes the policy changes necessary to stem the epidemic and overcome barriers to treatment. We are not waiting around for the federal government to provide that strategy.”

Grants will be made through Bloomberg Philanthropies, beginning with a three-year grant to Pennsylvania, which is expected to be about $10 million, according to The Washington Post. Pennsylvania has an overdose rate of about twice the national average but also has an innovative approach to fighting drug addiction, including an Opioid Command Center that meets weekly. The Bloomberg grant will help support that and similar programs aimed at reducing the overdose death rate.

"States have already been leading in ways Washington hasn't, and foundations can offer resources and expertise that can help them accelerate their work now,” Bloomberg wrote.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said that his state was chosen because they’re already doing good work in fighting the opioid epidemic but still have lots of problems to confront.

“I think Bloomberg Philanthropies was looking for a commonwealth or a state that was actually doing something,” Wolf told The Washington Post. “What I would hope is we can use the $10 million as a really generous add-on to the kinds of things we’re already doing.”

Bloomberg hopes to fund initiatives that can be replicated and help solve the overdose epidemic nationally.

“What we think we can do with $50 million is show the way in these 10 states,” Bloomberg said. “If they do things that we think make sense, then we will help fund it.”

It was not immediately clear which other states would benefit from Bloomberg’s grant money. However, the philanthropist hopes that the funds will make a difference to families across the nation.

“The pain, suffering, and death from opioid abuse is truly a national emergency. In just the time it took to read this commentary, another child has been removed from his or her parents' care because of a parent’s opioid use,” he wrote. “Solving this crisis will not be easy. But states have a chance to show the federal government that bolder actions can save lives. And with so many communities crying out for leadership, there is no time to waste.”

https://www.thefix.com/michael-bloomberg-spend-50-million-fight-addiction
 
Wealth of hypocrisy coming from Bloomberg but I wouldn't expect any less. Once legalization fully takes place, herb will be commonplace right alongside alcohol and cigarettes and folks are gonna have to deal with it.

The grand irony is how it's the healthiest of the three and the last to be recognized. Funny world we live in.

I'll be happy once it's legal so that "drug" label can finally be conditioned off. I cring everytime I hear someone call it a "drug", just because johnny law deemed it such.

That usually comes from non smokers too.
 
Only skimmed the comments, but even those fruity oils infused with weed still smell like weed. I get tired of folk saying it doesn’t smell like weed. It’s definitely not as strong as a joint, but anyone who has smoked weed or knows what weed smells like can smell that someone is smoking weed. Period.
 
I still can't find any rehab centers in his name but I did find this article. Can't wait to see which states, cites and or towns get the money.


Michael Bloomberg To Spend $50 Million to Fight Addiction
By Kelly Burch 12/05/18
Michael Bloomberg wrote about his intentions to fight the opioid epidemic in the 10 states hit hardest by it in a recent op-ed.

image_placeholder.gif


Former New York City mayor and billionaire Michael Bloomberg announced that he will spend $50 million to fight the opioid epidemic, focusing on 10 states that are hardest-hit by drug overdoses.

“The opioid epidemic is a national health crisis of historic proportion. Yet the federal government is still not tackling it with the urgency it requires,” Bloomberg wrote in an op-ed for USA Today. “What's truly needed is a comprehensive strategy that includes the policy changes necessary to stem the epidemic and overcome barriers to treatment. We are not waiting around for the federal government to provide that strategy.”

Grants will be made through Bloomberg Philanthropies, beginning with a three-year grant to Pennsylvania, which is expected to be about $10 million, according to The Washington Post. Pennsylvania has an overdose rate of about twice the national average but also has an innovative approach to fighting drug addiction, including an Opioid Command Center that meets weekly. The Bloomberg grant will help support that and similar programs aimed at reducing the overdose death rate.

"States have already been leading in ways Washington hasn't, and foundations can offer resources and expertise that can help them accelerate their work now,” Bloomberg wrote.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said that his state was chosen because they’re already doing good work in fighting the opioid epidemic but still have lots of problems to confront.

“I think Bloomberg Philanthropies was looking for a commonwealth or a state that was actually doing something,” Wolf told The Washington Post. “What I would hope is we can use the $10 million as a really generous add-on to the kinds of things we’re already doing.”

Bloomberg hopes to fund initiatives that can be replicated and help solve the overdose epidemic nationally.

“What we think we can do with $50 million is show the way in these 10 states,” Bloomberg said. “If they do things that we think make sense, then we will help fund it.”

It was not immediately clear which other states would benefit from Bloomberg’s grant money. However, the philanthropist hopes that the funds will make a difference to families across the nation.

“The pain, suffering, and death from opioid abuse is truly a national emergency. In just the time it took to read this commentary, another child has been removed from his or her parents' care because of a parent’s opioid use,” he wrote. “Solving this crisis will not be easy. But states have a chance to show the federal government that bolder actions can save lives. And with so many communities crying out for leadership, there is no time to waste.”

https://www.thefix.com/michael-bloomberg-spend-50-million-fight-addiction


Hmm, they are already saying this heroin issue is a health problem!!! There not going to attack this heroin problem like they did the crack agenda!! Its strange when the crack storm was tearing our neighborhoods apart, there was a crack story on every evening night news!! But there not showing the people these small white towns being torn apart by heroin and poverty!! Yall see how this agenda is being played out in front of our eyes??
 
Wealth of hypocrisy coming from Bloomberg but I wouldn't expect any less. Once legalization fully takes place, herb will be commonplace right alongside alcohol and cigarettes and folks are gonna have to deal with it.

The grand irony is how it's the healthiest of the three and the last to be recognized. Funny world we live in.

I'll be happy once it's legal so that "drug" label can finally be conditioned off. I cring everytime I hear someone call it a "drug", just because johnny law deemed it such.

That usually comes from non smokers too.

Right on, bro!!

Im so ready for this shit to go full legalize, that way I can put 110% of my energy into to what I have planned in my head!! Bruh Im not even in it for the money, I wanna pass this off to my grandkids and let them run with it!! I want them to be able to grow organix, breed and sell seeds! So, here I sit just waiting for that day cannabis is finally legal!!

I know how you feel when you made the comment about calling it a drug.. When I hear the word marijuana, it just drives me nuts!!
 
Right on, those edibles are sum sneaky treats! Your right, they can knock a person on their ass or make them become a part of the couch.. If a person has never tried edibles, try it once or twice. Its a nice body high!! Just be careful ingesting them, take it nice and slow. And sit back and wait for it to hit you and you will feel it coming on!!:hypnotised:

I sometimes wonder if they planned that with those pain pills.. Get a person hooked on them and then the dr tells no more pills!! They have two options quit cold turkey or start moving over to heroin!! Since the afghan war, Im sure the price of heroin has dropped and that makes a easy transition over to that drug!! My dad was hooked on those hydrocodone. He passed away and the only person that knew about it was his brother.. Me being the oldest kid, I got to see all the meds he was on.. He was going to the va hospital and they were giving him 93 hydro's a month. When I saw that, my mouth dropped. How long he was getting them, I have no clue. It was 2008, so it couldve been a year or so... Its just crazy how they can give a person that many pain pills a month.. He was living in dallas during that time, if he was back in denver he couldve got a medical card and used cannabis for whatever was causing him pain..

Sorry to hear about your pops man. 93 pain pills in a month is crazy....at least 3 a day for a month straight. SMH




I can understand people not liking the smell. People shouldn't have to be exposed to it like they shouldn't have to be exposed to cigarette smoke. One of the best things ever was banning cigarette smoke in clubs, bars, casinos, etc... I used to hate sitting at a table in the casino next to some asian cat chain smoking for hours straight.
 
Only skimmed the comments, but even those fruity oils infused with weed still smell like weed. I get tired of folk saying it doesn’t smell like weed. It’s definitely not as strong as a joint, but anyone who has smoked weed or knows what weed smells like can smell that someone is smoking weed. Period.

So true!! Thats why I pushed edibles and tinctures so much!! That way you can feel good and not have to worry about having the scent!! Dont take me the wrong way, I luv the smell of cannabis fresh or smoked! Nothing on this earth has that heavy fruity scent with a twist!!
 
Sorry to hear about your pops man. 93 pain pills in a month is crazy....at least 3 a day for a month straight. SMH




I can understand people not liking the smell. People shouldn't have to be exposed to it like they shouldn't have to be exposed to cigarette smoke. One of the best things ever was banning cigarette smoke in clubs, bars, casinos, etc... I used to hate sitting at a table in the casino next to some asian cat chain smoking for hours straight.

93 pills a month is beyond unbelievable.. Madness at its best!!

I hear ya about those ciggies! Sum of those cig smokers are pretty self-centered!!
 
Or you could be considerate and figure how to consume your own habit without affecting others...if I was a smoker and knew that the whole world didn't maybe I would do it b4 or after an event..maybe I would find other alternatives that the smell won't surpass through walls... I won't blast music at certain times a night and tell my neighbors go find another place to live or put sound proof material in their house no I'd be considerate and get headphones since listening to music is my own vice...weed wasn't the creation of partying...parties have and can easily exist without weed...what I can do is tell individuals to smoke anytime b4 or after event or juss not invite them anymore... Most times those individuals found out they rather party than stayed at home doing nothing...I can see you inconsiderate being that you claim there's way to work around police...unfortunately I'm black with Brown skin my eyes aren't blue and skin ain't white like yours negotiation with officers isn't that easy when your skin is darker than a paper bag

if somebody plays their music too loud I either put in earplugs or play my music louder. the moment you start picking on everything your neighbors do they start picking at you and you end up with a hostile environment.

But let's suppose I take these complaints seriously and start smoking outside. now the neighbors complain that they can smell weed on me in the elevator so I vape. Now my neighbors complain that they saw me looking like I might be high when I entered the lobby. Where does it end? at what point does live and let live apply?

And who said anything about negotiating with the cops? The whole idea is to either get the smell off you or take another way home so that there's nothing to negotiate in the first place.
 
Oh I used to drink, when I was drinking I was totally different person!! I got a blood clot and was put on blood thinners and was told to give up all forms of booze!! That was almost 13yrs ago. To be honest the only reason I started drinking was because all my jobs I got pissed test all the damn time. So a blood clot was my end all with booze and now I cant stand the scent of booze and I can spot someone drunk a mile away and when I see them I go the opposite way!!

Congrats on the 10yrs and I wish another 10+yrs of staying away for the juice!!

Thanks! Congrats to you too.

I gave up drinking because I was tired of blacking out, endangering myself and others, and losing friends from being an asshole.

It got to the point where I'd wake up some mornings feeling great but didn't know why. Then I'd realized I only had two drinks the night before. Hangovers worse so constant I only noticed them when I didn't have one.

With that said, I still DJ and hang out in bars. Most of my friends drink and that's cool. As long as no one's trying to push that peer pressure shit like they're still in high school then I'm happy that they're happy.

I'm DJing in Nob Hill tonight. I'll probably eat an edible before my set smoke out with the bartender's after.
 
Thanks! Congrats to you too.

I gave up drinking because I was tired of blacking out, endangering myself and others, and losing friends from being an asshole.

It got to the point where I'd wake up some mornings feeling great but didn't know why. Then I'd realized I only had two drinks the night before. Hangovers worse so constant I only noticed them when I didn't have one.

With that said, I still DJ and hang out in bars. Most of my friends drink and that's cool. As long as no one's trying to push that peer pressure shit like they're still in high school then I'm happy that they're happy.

I'm DJing in Nob Hill tonight. I'll probably eat an edible before my set smoke out with the bartender's after.


I understand what your saying!! Ive done stupid stuff drinking and when I was younger, I was outta control when I got the booze in me!! I dont miss those days, too bad those memories dont fad away with time!! Anyway, that chapter in my life is behind me!!

Enjoy the gig tonight and enjoy those edibles! I whipped up a mason jar of tincture last night and that stuff is powerful!! Ill be on the launchpad around mid afternoon!!
 
I understand what your saying!! Ive done stupid stuff drinking and when I was younger, I was outta control when I got the booze in me!! I dont miss those days, too bad those memories dont fad away with time!! Anyway, that chapter in my life is behind me!!

Enjoy the gig tonight and enjoy those edibles! I whipped up a mason jar of tincture last night and that stuff is powerful!! Ill be on the launchpad around mid afternoon!!

I can't lie. Drinking was a lot of fun. I've had many special moments that wouldn't have been half as meaningful without the booze. I still laugh thinking back to the time I pissed on that Harley-Davidson outside the bar and ran. Recording ridiculously drunken freestyles on the outro of my friend's album.

With that said, I'm glad I had it in me to walk away once the fun became problematic.

Wish I could enjoy some of that tincture with you. let me know if you ever come to San Francisco and I'll show you a few of my favorite smoking spots.
 
if somebody plays their music too loud I either put in earplugs or play my music louder. the moment you start picking on everything your neighbors do they start picking at you and you end up with a hostile environment.

But let's suppose I take these complaints seriously and start smoking outside. now the neighbors complain that they can smell weed on me in the elevator so I vape. Now my neighbors complain that they saw me looking like I might be high when I entered the lobby. Where does it end? at what point does live and let live apply?

And who said anything about negotiating with the cops? The whole idea is to either get the smell off you or take another way home so that there's nothing to negotiate in the first place.
why do I have to do all that for somebody else habit...that's like telling people they shouldn't drive at certain hrs to allow drunk drivers to maneuver...or telling people to walk on certain sidewalks to let dog owners to allow their pets to s hit everywhere...nah your vice your problem..what you do shouldn't affect others... If you want to get stupid drunk fine as long as you don't get behind the wheel and risk other people's lives or act stupid in public and cause chaos... If you want to own a dog fine as long as when you walk that mutt you pick up its s hit when it decides to use the bathroom, want to smoke weed fine as long as that smell only affects you and nobody else... Your habit is your hahit...any sensible person can easily understand that only an inconsiderate person dosent
 
I can't lie. Drinking was a lot of fun. I've had many special moments that wouldn't have been half as meaningful without the booze. I still laugh thinking back to the time I pissed on that Harley-Davidson outside the bar and ran. Recording ridiculously drunken freestyles on the outro of my friend's album.

With that said, I'm glad I had it in me to walk away once the fun became problematic.

Wish I could enjoy some of that tincture with you. let me know if you ever come to San Francisco and I'll show you a few of my favorite smoking spots.

Right on, my wife and I wanna take a train ride from LA all the way up to Washington and stop at cities along the ride and take it all in!! So, do be surprised to see a pm from me!
 
why do I have to do all that for somebody else habit...that's like telling people they shouldn't drive at certain hrs to allow drunk drivers to maneuver...or telling people to walk on certain sidewalks to let dog owners to allow their pets to s hit everywhere...nah your vice your problem..what you do shouldn't affect others... If you want to get stupid drunk fine as long as you don't get behind the wheel and risk other people's lives or act stupid in public and cause chaos... If you want to own a dog fine as long as when you walk that mutt you pick up its s hit when it decides to use the bathroom, want to smoke weed fine as long as that smell only affects you and nobody else... Your habit is your hahit...any sensible person can easily understand that only an inconsiderate person dosent

put it like this, My roommates don't want me to smoke in the house. That's fine I go outside. But I would never allow them to tell me that I can't smell like weed or be high in my own home.

if I go outside and the neighbor wants me to stay away from a certain area because it's under their kid's window okay that's fine too. But don't tell me to leave my own yard completely.

If my apartment neighbor complained that they could smell the weed from downstairs okay I can go on the balcony, but if that's not good enough shut your damn windows.

I don't complain when neighbors fight with their spouses, burn rubber at 2am, or cook food that smells like boiled earwax. I respect my neighbors right to be annoying and I expect them to respect me in return.

While we're at it.Somebody driving dangerously drunk or ruining somebody's new shoes with a piece of dogshit is not even in the same league as dealing with a bad smell.
 
Cannabis Breeding: How Are New Strains Created?

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(Nastasic/iStock)
While browsing Leafly’s strain database, you may wonder what a cross of this and that strain is, what a hybrid or a backcross is, or what a parent strain is. All of these have to do with plant breeding—essentially, breeding a male and female plant to combine or refine the genetics of two plants or strains. Breeding two different strains often results in a new strain, or hybrid.


Cannabis breeders typically breed to purify and strengthen strains, combine strain traits, or enhance specific characteristics.
Cannabis breeders typically breed to purify and strengthen strains, combine strain traits, or enhance specific characteristics like higher yields, specific aromas, potency, and many other things.

When growing and breeding, it’s important to know where your seeds come from and what kind of genetics they have. If the seed breeder can’t give you a detailed history of how a packet of seeds was bred or what they were crossed with, you never really know what you’re getting.
Plant breeding is a fundamental process of growing cannabis. Breeding is highly technical and typically done on a commercial scale, but with legalization increasing, breeding is becoming more popular. You can do even do it yourself.

The Basics of Breeding
Cannabis plants can be either male or female. Cannabis consumers are mainly concerned with female plants, because only females produce the sticky buds that we all know and love. But male cannabis plants are important for the breeding process, as they are needed to pollinate the bud-producing females.


Take the strain Super Lemon Haze as an example. It’s a hybrid (or a “cross”) of Super Silver Haze and Lemon Skunk—these are the parent strains. At some point, the breeder decided that they liked some attributes of Super Silver Haze and some of Lemon Skunk and decided to combine the two.

To do this, you need a male of one strain to pollinate a female of the other. Once pollinated, the female will then produce seeds that express the genes of both the male and female plant. Those seeds will be harvested and grown separately, and voilà: You have created a hybrid.

So how do you know whether to pick a male or a female of each strain that you’re crossing?

“Often in cannabis, the traits of the female carry over to progeny (seeds) more than the male. That said, the traits of the male are often obvious to the discerning grower so one should definitely choose a male that will complement the traits of the female,” says Nat Pennington, founder and CEO of Humboldt Seed Company who’s been breeding cannabis for 20 years. “So much is possible with truly intentional breeding strategies.”

How to Breed Cannabis Plants
After two parent strains are selected for breeding, a male and several females are put into a breeding chamber to contain the pollen. A breeding chamber can be as simple as an enclosed environment with plastic sheeting on the sides, or a specially designed sterile environment for large-scale breeding.

“A healthy male can pollinate up to 20 females, and by pollinate, I mean absolutely cover the plant with seeds.”
Nat Penningon, Humboldt Seed Company
A single male plant can pollinate tens of females. “It’s always a good idea to have only one male, genetically speaking, per pollination effort,” says Pennington. “A healthy male can pollinate up to 20 females, and by pollinate, I mean absolutely cover the plant with seeds.”

This is intentional breeding—any grower who’s accidentally grown a male and pollinated a crop will know that one male can easy pollinate hundreds of females, filling your whole crop with seeds.

Once in the breeding chamber, you can grow the plants vegetatively for a few weeks to let them get bigger, but it’s not necessary. Put them on a flowering light cycle: 12 hours of light, 12 hours of dark.

The mature male will grow pollen sacs within the first couple weeks of its flowering phase. Pollen will release from the sacs, move through the air, and land on the female plants, pollinating them. Having an enclosed breeding chamber is important to contain the pollen and also to prevent outside pollen from getting in.

You can also help along the pollination effort by shaking pollen from the male onto the females, or by collecting pollen from the male and directly applying it to the females. These female plants will continue to grow and flower, during which they’ll grow seeds (as well as buds). These seeds will express the genetics of both the male and female plant.


When the seeds are mature, they are harvested and stratified (or dried). “The secondary process of maturation happens after the plant is dead, and the seed needs to be stratified before it will germinate,” says Pennington. “In general, harvest for flower takes place three to four weeks before harvest for seed.”

These seeds—now a hybrid of the two parent strains—will be grown on their own, outside of the breeding environment.

Phenotypes
But the process doesn’t end there. The hybrid strain that you buy at the dispensary has likely gone through many rounds—or generations—of breeding to strengthen its genes and to ensure that its descendants are healthy and consistent.


Just as you and your sibling might have different physical attributes from your parents, each seed created from a round of cross-pollination will have different attributes from its parent strains. Maybe you have your father’s eyes and your mother’s hair, but your sister has your mother’s eyes and hair. Each cannabis seed is unique and will express different traits, and different combinations of traits, from one or both of the parent strains. These seeds with various expressions are called phenotypes.

Homozygosity ensures that a plant will consistently produce the same seeds with the same genetic makeup over and over again.
A plant that produces a set of phenotypes that have a lot of variety are said to be heterozygous. With cannabis, you typically want seeds that are homozygous—ones that have the same set of genes. Homozygosity ensures that a plant will consistently produce the same seeds with the same genetic makeup over and over again, ensuring that buyers and consumers will get the same plant or seed time and again.

After a strain is crossed, a breeder will then have to select which phenotype of the new strain they like best. For large-scale growers, they want to choose the best phenotype for mass production.

Back to the Super Lemon Haze example: This strain takes a lot of its bud structure, trichome and resin production, and overall appearance from Super Silver Haze. But it takes its flavors and aromas from Lemon Skunk.


Lemon Skunk also tends to grow extremely tall and has loose buds, whereas Super Silver Haze grows smaller and has denser buds. Through selecting specific phenotypes, a breeder can pick one that has the attributes they want to keep. In this case, a phenotype that has the structure and bud density of Super Silver Haze and the flavors and aromas of Lemon Skunk.

Most likely, there were early phenotypes of Super Lemon Haze that grew tall and loose like Lemon Skunk, or tasted more like Super Silver Haze. But the breeder discarded those phenotypes and keep growing the ones that have the attributes of what we now know is Super Lemon Haze.

Backcrossing
High-quality breeding still doesn’t stop there. Once a breeder has crossed a strain and narrowed down a phenotype and finally has the one, they will usually backcross that strain to strengthen its genetics.

Backcrossing is a practice where a breeder will cross-pollinate the new strain with itself or a parent—essentially, inbreeding the strain. This makes the strain more homozygous, and strengthens its genetics and desirable characteristics, and also ensures that those genes continue to pass down from generation to generation.


The hybrid that you bought from the dispensary has gone through months and even years of growing, crossing, and backcrossing, as well as a selection process to pick the best phenotype of that strain.

Breeding is about time and patience. Says Pennington: “To be a breeder, you have to be willing to accept the fact that you won’t have uniformity in the offspring, [you’ll get] lots of ugly ducklings in the hunt for your golden goose. To make seeds that will actually reflect the golden goose takes time, and it takes more than just a one-off cross. Even after you found your golden goose, expect to have to do a whole number of stabilizing backcrosses to reproduce your golden goose in seed form.”
 
Check out Hemp Across Human History in This Timeline
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(Julia Sumpter/Leafly)
Hemp didn’t just fall out of the sky because Congress re-legalized it in 2018 US Farm Bill this week. Hemp as a fuel, food, fiber—and medicine—remains one of mankind’s oldest, dearest friends. Now it’s set to be a $22 billion US industry. Take a walk with us down through the eons in this timeline of hemp and human history.

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Baltimore Prosecutor Files Rare Petition to Erase Cannabis Convictions
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In this July 27, 2016 file photo, Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, right, holds a news conference near the site where Freddie Gray was arrested after her office dropped the remaining charges against three Baltimore police officers awaiting trial in Gray's death, in Baltimore. Mosby will no longer prosecute any marijuana possession cases, regardless of the quantity of the drug or an individual’s prior criminal record, authorities have announced. (Steve Ruark/AP)
BALTIMORE (AP) — Baltimore’s top prosecutor has filed a rarely used legal petition intended to vacate 3,778 convictions for cannabis possession, arguing an extraordinary legal strategy is necessary to “right an extraordinary wrong.”


In a highly unusual “Maryland v. Maryland” filing in state court, State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby used a petition called “writ of error coram nobis” that allows a court to reopen cases when substantial error is found that wasn’t apparent in initial judgments. The petition, if granted, could wipe out thousands of cannabis possession convictions.

https://www.leafly.com/news/politic...ing-drug-convictions-heres-how-seattle-did-it
Mosby’s arguments are based on what she paints as an opportunity to achieve retroactive justice by acknowledging racial disparities in how pot possession cases over years were policed and prosecuted in Baltimore, a city under a federal oversight program due to discriminatory and unconstitutional policing.

“The sordid history of marijuana prohibition lies in ethnic and racial bigotry,” she writes in the filing, which notes that racial disparities in possession arrests continue to exist in majority-black Baltimore even after Maryland’s 2014 decriminalization of amounts less than 10 grams.

Mosby’s actions are part of an ongoing national shift with the way criminal justice functions regarding marijuana, which is allowed for some form of medical use in most U.S. states even as it remains illegal under federal law. Simple pot possession is a crime prosecutors in some other American cities including New York, Philadelphia and St. Louis won’t pursue.

Her court petition comes the same week she announced her office will no longer prosecute any cannabis possession cases, regardless of the quantity or an individual’s criminal record. She argued that limited resources were needed to address more significant crimes in a U.S. city grappling with chronically high violent crime rates and no shortage of dangerous drug syndicates.

Officers will continue to make arrests for illegal marijuana possession “unless and until the state legislature changes the law regarding marijuana possession.”
Gary Tuggle, interim Baltimore Police commissioner
Some have dismissed Mosby’s moves this week as a kind of stunt, arguing that Baltimore essentially stopped prosecuting simple cannabis possession cases years ago. Thiru Vignarajah, an ex-Maryland deputy attorney general who unsuccessfully challenged Mosby in last year’s primary for Baltimore’s state’s attorney job, said that only 78 out of more than 1,100 possession cases actually went forward since 2014.

“Ending prosecutions does not end arrests & changing policy requires partnership — without the police, this is just hollow grandstanding,” he tweeted.


She hasn’t gotten immediate buy-in from Baltimore’s acting police leader, who notes officers are sworn to enforce existing laws made by lawmakers. Interim Commissioner Gary Tuggle stressed that his officers will continue to make arrests for illegal marijuana possession “unless and until the state legislature changes the law regarding marijuana possession.”

Tuggle will soon be replaced by New Orleans Police Superintendent Michael Harrison, who is starting as Baltimore’s acting commissioner on Feb. 11.

“This latest disappointing action of the City State's Attorney has no impact here.”
Jeffrey Gahler, Harford County Sheriff
Meanwhile, the city’s mayor, Catherine Pugh, said she was supportive of what she believes Mosby is trying to address while also stressing that drug dealers fuel violence. She urged state lawmakers to “look carefully at these issues” to figure out a unified approach.

Harford County Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler said: “I wanted to be sure the citizens of Harford County understand, this latest disappointing action of the City State’s Attorney has no impact here. We will continue to enforce the State’s laws in regards to marijuana possession because that is what we are sworn to do.”

In a phone interview, University of Baltimore law professor David Jaros said Thursday that it is not yet clear whether Mosby’s decisions might change Maryland’s conversation about marijuana and criminal justice in a productive way.

“It’s political theater if all it does is get your name out there and nothing changes. But if its politics that promotes change, it’s something different,” he said.


Jaros pointed out that one criticism of Mosby is that she positions herself among America’s “progressive” city prosecutors but some argue they haven’t seen nearly enough progressive policies coming from her office.

“This is a legitimate move that is part of a move across the country that she is now aligning herself with. And I think it’s a productive move. But whether or not it’s a panacea I think is a very legitimate question given there weren’t a large number of these cases going forward,” he said.
 
How to Build a Simple Home Cannabis Garden for $100, $500, & $1,000

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(Leafly)



If you aren’t already growing your own cannabis at home, that might be due to one of the following misconceptions about constructing an indoor garden:

  • You may think that acquiring the materials necessary will be difficult and tedious. This is not true.
  • You suspect that the building process itself requires great technical proficiency. It does not.
  • You assume building a grow space is highly expensive. This couldn’t be further from the truth.
And we’ll prove it! Building your own climate-controlled indoor grow can be easy, convenient, and inexpensive all at the same time.


This guide will help you build from scratch three different garden setups at three different price points. Each build will contain all of the necessary components needed for climate control, and will not require any technical proficiency to assemble.

All of the hardware used for each project can be ordered on Amazon. This opens up the opportunity for just about anyone with internet access to order and discreetly receive the parts necessary for these builds.

Note: Product prices below may fluctuate slightly over time.

The Nano Grow: $100 to $150
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(Patrick Bennett/Leafly)
Who Should Use This Build?
First-time growers, budget growers, and those who wish to keep their garden as inconspicuous as possible are a good fit for the Nano Grow. At 24”x 24”, this tent is small enough to fit in most closets.

Supply List:

Total Cost:

  • Basic: $116.77
  • With inline fan: $134.76
  • With thermometer: $128.28
  • With both: $146.27
The Nano Grow is designed to be the most budget-friendly and least technical design. This build focuses on trimming down the necessary components to eliminate any superfluous items. While the essentials will cost you just over $100, you can add an optional inline fan and thermometer/hydrometer for just bit more.

LED lights work well in this environment because they produce very little heat. Although filtration for a grow of this size is not necessary, those who wish to grow in a more confined space should consider opting for the intake fan and thermometer/hydrometer. This will help to both increase air circulation and provide some fundamental metrics for maintaining a healthy environment for the plants.

With the tent height maxing out at 48”, plants grown in this space should not exceed 24” in height and we recommend using dwarf, indica, and auto-flowering varieties for best results.


Build Notes:
  • Assembly Time: ~30 min
  • Hardware Recommendations: Duct tape, heavy-duty zip ties
  • Total Power Outlets Required: 2 to 3
  • Where to Assemble: Closet space or room
  • Recommended Plant Count: 1 to 2 plants
Components:
  • Tent: The Topolight grow tent is perfect for a small space or closet and features highly reflective mylar coating on the inside to help provide your plants with optimal lighting.
  • Light: The Growstar LED Full Spectrum UFO Light is an inexpensive and efficient fixture designed to provide a spectrum suitable for both vegetative and flowering plants. This light features 30w of Cree LED and emits a blue/purple hue. You also receive the necessary components to hang the light at variable heights in order to follow a canopy as it grows. LED lights do not add any additional heat to the tent and require less filtration to maintain proper temperatures.
  • Filtration: A 6” Lorell clip-on fan provides airflow within the tent. Additionally, you may add a 4” 100CFM inline duct fan to provide an intake mechanism to cycle clean air throughout the tent. If you decide to buy the intake duct fan, install it on the bottom of the tent using duct tape and zip ties. The clip-on fan will help move air around inside of the tent. By keeping the top duct port open, air may exhaust passively. If you decide to opt out of the intake duct fan, leave both the bottom and the top port open for air movement.
  • Automation: This build comes with a 24-hour mechanical timer designed to keep the light on an automated cycle. Mechanical timers are slightly more affordable than their digital counterparts.
  • Climate Metering: The basic version of this build does not feature any climate monitoring hardware. However, there is an option to purchase an Acurite thermometer/hydrometer which will allow you to monitor essential metrics within the tent.

The Micro Grow: $500
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(Patrick Bennett/Leafly)
Who Should Use This Build?
The Micro Grow is a value-driven package designed to provide all of the essentials for a single tent grow. More advanced than the Nano Grow, it’s a complete system that can handle just about any grow style.

This build is a perfect fit for a small room or garage space. At 64” tall, the tent affords enough room to propagate most smaller, bushier cultivars. There is a canopy height limit of between 35” and 42”.

In this setup, 2 to 4 plants are recommended. You can squeeze in 6 plants if you grow small auto-flowering varieties and/or vegetate the plants for less time.

Supply List:
Total Cost: $464.87

Unlike the Nano Grow, this build contains a complete ventilation system designed to filter and exhaust hot air while simultaneously bringing in clean, cool air. Additionally, the timer has been upgraded to the dual-outlet digital model for controlling both the light and carbon filter exhaust system. A variable speed vent fan controller is also added for maximum climate control.

With the 315w CMH (ceramic metal halide) lights, enough heat is generated to recommend this build for an open space to allow for the best possible air circulation through the tent. The included 3100k bulb allows you to use the tent for both vegetative and flowering cycles.


Build Notes:
  • Assembly Time: ~1 hour
  • Hardware Recommendations: Duct tape, heavy-duty zip ties
  • Total Power Outlets Required: 4 (5-outlet grounded adaptor recommended)
  • Where to Assemble: Room or garage
  • Recommended Plant Count: 2 to 4 plants
Components:
  • Tent: The Casolly 32”x32”x64” Indoor Grow Room provides adequate space for a much more powerful fixture, allowing you to cultivate more plants than the Nano Grow. This tent also features multiple ducting ports for proper air ventilation systems to be installed and comes with a front-sided concealable window for easy monitoring.
  • Light: This build features a 120v 315w CMH light fixture from TopoGrow. CMH lights give off far less heat than HID fixtures such as high-pressure sodium (HPS) and metal halide (MH). Complete with a 3100k bulb, this fixture produces a light spectrum conducive to both vegetative and flowering plants, eliminating the need to switch lights between cycles. Even better, this CMH fixture comes with a built-in ballast.
  • Filtration: Although CMH fixtures produce less heat than their competitors, there’s still a need for proper ducting and ventilation to remove hot air from the tent. For this build, we chose to pair a Growsun 4” indoor exhaust kit with a 6” Vivosun 240CFM inline duct booster fan. To maintain proper ventilation, a fan speed adjuster has been added. Additionally, a 6” Lorell clip-on-fan is used for airflow over the plant canopy.
  • Automation: A dual outlet digital timer is included for tandem use with the carbon filter exhaust and light fixture.
  • Climate Metering: The Acuright Digital thermometer/hydrometer will help monitor temperature and humidity levels within the tent, making climate control adjustments easier.
Filtration Setup: The 315w CMH generates enough heat to require filtration from the top of the tent. Airflow should be directed upward by installing the 6” duct booster fan at the bottom of the tent using duct tape and zip ties with the 4” carbon filter exhaust system at the top. Use heavy-duty zip ties to fasten the carbon filter at the back of the tent. Duct tape may be used to attach the fan to the filter as well as the filter to the aluminum ducting. Guide the ducting through the top port and fasten it with zip ties and duct tape.

With this system, cool air will enter through the bottom of the tent, and warm air will be scrubbed as it leaves the top of the tent. The 6” clip-on fan should be placed just above canopy level on the back-left pole to help circulate air evenly as the plants mature.


Standard Grow: $1,000
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(Patrick Bennett/Leafly)
Who Should Use This Build?
The Standard Grow offers a complete package for growers who wish to maintain a perpetual cultivation operation year-round. It covers all of the essentials in housing, lighting, automation, and filtration for a standard home grow.

No matter what your legal plant limit is, this tent should be able to handle it. At 80” for the main grow chamber, height is not a problem, and just about any cultivar can be propagated successfully under this build. With a 630w 3100k CMH fixture, this room can be used for both vegetative and flowering stages.

For growers who want a full system capable of germinating seedlings, taking and keeping clones, maintaining mother plants, and have multiple chambers for various projects, this is the build for you.

However, this system tends to run hot and will need the open air of a large room or garage to function optimally.

Supply List:
Total Cost: $917.67

The “Standard Grow” is designed to be a fully comprehensive cannabis cultivation and propagation system, offering an all-inclusive perpetual grow space packed into a 4×5’ build. For just under $1,000, you get a 3-chambered, 3-light tent with a full air filtration system, automation and metering included.

This build allows growers to cultivate at multiple stages in the plant’s life cycle as well as provide housing for multiple propagation projects.

The 4×4’ main tent is powered by a 630w CMH light and the 1×4’ two-tiered tent extension is built out with two 4-bulb t5 fluorescent light fixtures. Complete with four fans, two dual outlet timers, and adjustable intake/exhaust components, this 80” tent supports even the most ambitious of grows.
 
5 Reasons Why You Should Consider Growing Your Own Cannabis

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Home cannabis cultivation has come a long way since the days of total prohibition, with more states and Washington DC now offering some form of cultivation provision. In these legal states, it has never been a better time to pick up growing as a hobby. Don’t fret if your thumb isn’t as green as you would like it to be; here are five reasons why you should throw your worries to the wind and just grow your own cannabis!




Because You Can: It’s Legal (Depending on Where You Live)
As of 2017, you can legally grow cannabis (with varied restrictions) in a number of states, plus Washington DC. As long as you meet the requirements to cultivate within these states, you’re free to grow your own. Pretty exciting, right?

Most states allow for the cultivation of between 4-6 plants, although there are some stipulations in certain states that allow for larger plant counts. Furthermore, many states that allow for home cultivation also provide stipulations allowing for for access points where you can pick up legal genetics such as seeds and clones to take home. These guidelines afford dispensaries and nurseries the opportunity to service a new market of home growers with house flavors to take home and try out in the garden.




The Control Is in Your Hands
Growing cannabis at home allows you to become your own master cultivator, giving you complete autonomy to control every aspect of the cultivation process. Given that there are so many different ways to become a successful cannabis grower at home, one of the most intrinsically rewarding aspects of this process is developing a system that works just right for you. Whether you are looking to cultivate organically, hydroponically, in soil containers, or raised beds, there is a system out there designed to make growing cannabis both easy and fun for your individual preference.




Having control over a grow not only gives a grower the opportunity to personalize their own cultivation style, it affords a level of safety for those who want to take precautions in order to create a safe-to-consume product. Certain pesticides, fungicides, miticides, fertilizers, and other garden amendments may be harmful to someone with a compromised immune system. Due to the lack of transparency when it comes to regulating garden inputs in some states, it can be unsafe for some individuals to rely on these products for their medicine. With home grow laws in place, patients who are in these positions can take control over their medicine by producing it in the comfort of their homes.

Growing Is a Gateway…Hobby
An interesting side effect of taking on cannabis cultivation as a hobby is the sudden uptick in interest you’ll generate for growing more than just ganja. Your green thumb for other crops may flourish once you get the hang of growing your own cannabis. What’s more, cultivation is an addictive practice that can almost certainly leave you hooked on not only general horticulture, but many other trades tied to the practice as well. The same principles and practices that apply to cannabis cultivation will also help you develop a myriad of other life skills along the way.




Think about it: successful growers also must be successful electricians, designers, plumbers, carpenters, and even aficionados. Each of these skills required to succeed in the grow room is a new opportunity to dive into something new and exciting. The upside: these are alllife skills that you will have in your personal arsenal regardless of whether or not you continue to cultivate.

You’ll Save Money Over Time
The initial investment cost associated with home growing is a major concern for many who are worried that their equity in growing won’t pay itself off over time. Fortunately, growing isn’t reserved for just those who can afford it, and you’ll be able to get started on virtually any budget. In fact, many grows can actually pay back their initial investment after just one successful harvest.


Yes, there will always be some startup costs associated with building out a grow space, but these costs dissipate over time as your space will require less monetary input to sustain viability. Although the price of cannabis continues to drop at the dispensary level, buying over time can definitely add up faster than the handful of inexpensive inputs required to maintain your home grow.

Learning Is Easy
Home cultivation resources have never be more widely available than they are right now with the end of prohibition on the horizon. As more jurisdictions begin to afford growers their rights to cultivate at home, the quality and quantity of educational information available to growers will only continue to expand. Books, magazines, websites, forums, online and in-person growing communities—these are just a few examples of ways in which growers are sharing the bounty of their knowledge with the world.

Long gone are the days of searching clandestine threads online for grow tips. Nowadays there are multiple weekly podcasts dedicated to cannabis cultivation, as well as open workshops in legal states where growers can actually meet face-to-face to talk about growing. These are not only exciting times for cannabis enthusiasts everywhere, but the perfect time for the new home grower to get started!
 
Cannabis is going to be legal, sooner than we think!! You can either stand in line and give your money to a dispensary or you can learn how to grow your own flowers!! You can save a lot money, just by giving sum time up and mastering the art of growing!!
 
What Is Cannabis Ruderalis?
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You may already know the differences between indica and sativa varieties of cannabis, but have you heard of cannabis ruderalis? According to Jorge Cervantes, grow guru and author of The Cannabis Encyclopedia, “Botanists disagree as to whether c. ruderalis qualifies as a separate species or subspecies.” So, to answer some of the questions we receive about cannabis ruderalis and autoflowering genetics, Leafly has put together a quick background on this lesser-known classification of cannabis strains.




The Origin of Cannabis Ruderalis
The term ruderalis stems from the root word ruderal. In the plant world, a ruderal species is one that grows in spite of its environment being inhabited by humans or being otherwise affected by naturally occurring disturbances to the area. Many believe ruderalis to be a descendant of indica genetics that adjusted to the harsh climates and the shorter growing seasons of the northern regions where it originates. Cannabis ruderalis is native to areas in Asia, Central/Eastern Europe, and specifically Russia, where botanists used the term “ruderalis” to classify the breeds of hemp plant that had escaped from human and cultivation, adapting to the extreme environments found in these climates.

Originally, cannabis ruderalis was considered a wild breed of cannabis. However, in recent years it has been brought indoors to influence new hybrid varieties.

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Properties of Cannabis Ruderalis
Cannabis ruderalis is a short and stalky plant, especially when compared to its sativa and indica counterparts. It typically sits between 1 and 2.5 feet tall at harvest, with a rugged and shaggy growth pattern that produces wide leaflets that express themselves in a light green hue. The buds from the ruderalis plant tend to be small but still relatively chunky, and are supported by the sturdy, thick stems.

What really sets ruderalis apart is its flowering cycle that is induced according to its maturity instead of being activated by the photoperiod like indica and sativa varieties. Modern ruderalis hybrids usually begin to flower between 21 and 30 days after the seeds have been planted, regardless of the light cycle. This is why most ruderalis hybrids are attributed as “autoflowering” strains.



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Effects of Cannabis Ruderalis
The effects of cannabis ruderalis alone are minimized by its naturally low concentrations of THC. However, the stability and short lifecycle make ruderalis versatile and attractive to breeders who want to take advantage of its autoflowering trait. Ruderalis genes offer the ability for breeders to create an autoflowering hybrid with the advanced potency and flavor profile from its genetic partner.
 
Growing Cannabis Indoors vs. Outdoors: 3 Key Differences
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Cannabis has long been cultivated outdoors and is one of the oldest agricultural crops in existence. Growing cannabis indoors, however, has been around for less than a century and came about as a result of prohibition. Most advancements in cannabis production have occurred during the era of indoor cultivation; staying out of sight was initially a way to protect the grower from the laws against cannabis.

As technology advanced, the industry was able to expand its knowledge of the plant by leaps and bounds, and this was also true for areas where outdoor farming managed to succeed, like Southern Oregon and Northern California. The differences are not only important to aspiring cannabis farmers, but to the consumer comparing outdoor and indoor grown products at the dispensary counter.

How does the environment affect the outcome of a strain, and what considerations must a grower make when choosing between the two?

Controlled vs. Natural Climates
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There are many reasons to grow indoors over outdoors, such as being free to choose your location with minimal constraints and the ability to completely control your grow environment. Controlling temperature, light source, CO2 production, and humidity creates a stable habitat to optimize your plants’ growth without having to risk outdoor elements.

The indoor grower typically finds cosmetically pristine flowers with higher THC percentages. On the other hand, no bulb can produce the same spectrum of light unique to the sun which, in turn, limits indoor gardens with smaller yields and less vigorous plants. Outdoor farming, however, requires a climate suitable for cannabis production—good sun exposure, hot days, warm nights, and low humidity.





Nevertheless, growing indoors has complications as well. When the grower tries to create a natural environment indoors, there are factors in the natural process that cannot be replicated. For example, plants grown outside have substantial help against mites from natural predators who share the habitat. Wasps, ants, and ladybugs are some of “nature’s helpers” that keep mite populations at bay.

Indoors, the grower cannot hope to completely mimic the incredibly complicated natural environment. If mites appear in an indoor grow space, they can be a challenge to control. With the ever-increasing consumer concerns about the overuse of pesticides and insecticides, some cultivators might find the trade-offs of growing outdoors worth investigating.





Price of Growing Cannabis Indoors vs. Outdoors
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Both indoor and outdoor grows demand substantial up-front costs, but the difference becomes apparent long-term. Indoor climate control systems can cost a small fortune to operate, whereas a majority of the costs associated with outdoor grows are in the startup of the operation.

Labor costs for indoor and outdoor gardens also vary drastically. With continual turnover in an indoor garden, there’s always work to be done. Pruning, trellising, watering, feeding, and harvest work are ongoing and more demanding for smaller yields. Outdoors, the grower is working one crop throughout the season. Many outdoor farms with large outputs can operate with up to four employees full-time until harvest, when additional workers need to be brought in.




The high costs of indoor farming may be recouped through breeding projects, year-round harvests, and potent products that have higher selling points. Furthermore, manufactured indoor environments allow growers to cultivate strains that would otherwise be unsuitable for their local outdoor environment and climate. However, with the rising cost of energy and an increasing demand for more flower in the marketplace, outdoor farming may be able supply the market with quality products at a more reasonable price.

Quality of Cannabis Grown Indoors vs. Outdoors
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Indoor flower has long been recognized as the top-of-the-line product. Being able to control your environment and expedite breeding has resulted in aesthetically beautiful strains with magnificent flavor profiles. Introducing higher CO2 levels than in the natural environment increases bud growth and produces THC levels that are difficult to obtain outdoors.

Additionally, indoor cannabis does not have to deal with rain, wind, or any of the other natural elements that can damage an outdoor crop. The buds remain in pristine condition and only start to degrade once handling begins. The scale of most indoor operations generally allows for crops to be harvested in peak conditions and for the product to be cured in a controlled climate.

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A cannabis plant under LED lights. (Courtesy of GroBox)
Outdoor flower is, of course, subject to the whims of the natural environment. Though the end product may not look as perfect, the taste, effects, and aroma should still be there. Some consumers find sun-grown organic cannabis to be preferable to the cosmetically pristine indoor alternative.

Many stereotypes about outdoor cannabis exist for one key reason: legality. A large majority of outdoor cannabis seen by consumers has gone through a gauntlet of post-harvest abuse. Partly due to conflicts between state and federal law, many outdoor cannabis farms have to take risks to cultivate their product. As a result, oftentimes the harvest is rapid, curing is nearly non-existent, and aggressive handling is necessary to get it to market. As the laws change and outdoor facilities are able to take their time in processing, the market should see an increase in quality from outdoor grows.


Recently there has been an emergence of commercial greenhouse farming that strikes a balance between the two methods. This style of farming is producing quality results, which is exciting to see in this emerging industry. As we have seen, all styles of farming offer positives and negatives, and as a consumer or a producer, it’s always important to continually educate yourself. Step outside of your routine to try something new, and keep an open mind.
 
Cannabis Seeds 101: All You Need to Know and More
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What Are Cannabis Seeds?
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Cannabis is a dioecious plant, meaning its female and male reproductive organs are found on separate individuals. Female cannabis plants are grown in an environment without males to produce what we find in medical and recreational stores: seedless, high potency marijuana flowers, traditionally known as “sinsemilla.”

In order to reproduce, the flower of a female plant must be pollinated by a male plant after which the female flower produces seeds. However, many varieties of cannabis can produce some male flowers alongside female flowers on the same plant, especially if exposed to environmental stressors or left to flower for a longer than normal period. This is known as the hermaphrodite condition, and sometimes these male flowers will produce viable pollen and self-pollinate the surrounding female flowers to create seeds.

Once the seeds are mature, the female plant begins to die, and seeds are either dropped to the ground where they germinate and grow into new cannabis plants the next spring, or they are harvested for processing into hemp seed oil, food products, or to be sown to become the next generation of plants.


What Are Feminized Cannabis Seeds?
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Feminized cannabis seeds are seeds that are produced by causing the monoecious, or hermaphrodite condition in a female cannabis plant. This is achieved through several methods:


Feminized seeds produce plants that are nearly identical to this self-pollinated (or “selfed”) female parent plant, as only one set of genes is present. This is sometimes referred to as “cloning by seed” and will not produce any male plants. However, most producers of feminized seeds do not go through the lengthy (and costly) process of identifying a completely stable mother plant for seed production. Many, if not most feminized seeds end up being hermaphrodites, which can result in flowers with seeds in them and reduced yields. Most experienced growers will not use feminized seed, and they should never be used for breeding purposes.

What Are Auto-Flowering Cannabis Seeds?
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Most cannabis plants begin their flowering cycle when the photoperiod, or length of time they are exposed to light each day, is reduced to somewhere between 12 and 14 hours, regardless of the size or age of the plant. The species Cannabis ruderalis, however, will begin flowering once the plant reaches a certain age and does not depend on a change in photoperiod.

Some breeders have crossed the low-THC ruderalis with other more potent varieties to create auto-flowering strains. These strains will produce indica, sativa, or hybrid-like cannabis flowers that start blooming as soon as they reach maturity. This is desirable especially in northern climates where summers are short and cold, and wet weather comes early in the fall. Auto-flowering strains can be started in early spring and will flower during the longest days of summer to take advantage of the highest quality light available. Unlike clone mothers, auto-flowering strains cannot be kept in a vegetative state.


What Is the Difference Between Cannabis Seeds and Cannabis Clones?
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A clone is a cutting taken from a plant and then placed in some sort of grow medium to induce root production. Once it has rooted, it can be grown into a mature plant that is genetically identical to the one it was cut from.

Seeds carry genetic information from two parent plants that can be expressed in numerous different combinations, some like the mother, some like the father, and many presenting various traits from both. Creating identical cannabis plants using seeds is a very difficult and lengthy process. Generally, cannabis producers will plant many seeds and choose the best plant, and then take clones from that individual to grow their cannabis flowers, or simply start with a proven clone acquired from another grower as their mother plant.

Where Can I Buy Cannabis Seeds?
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Cannabis seeds can be found on numerous online seed banks, many of which are located in the UK, the Netherlands, Spain, and Canada, where the laws on selling cannabis seeds are much more lax than in other countries. It is illegal to bring seeds into the US and Customs will seize any cannabis seeds that they find in packages or on a person. In states that have home-grow provisions in their medical marijuana laws, you may purchase seeds at dispensaries. Seed banks are popping up in many of these states.


What Is the Legality of Cannabis Seeds?
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Depending on what state you live in, it may or may not be legal to sell, purchase, or possess cannabis seeds. In the United States, all cannabis seeds are considered illegal at the federal level.

Seed banks exist outside of the US and can sell them for “souvenir purposes,” but it is illegal to bring seeds into the US and Customs will seize any cannabis seeds that they find in packages or on a person.

What Makes a Cannabis Seed High Quality?
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There are several factors that go into determining whether cannabis seeds are high quality or not. First of all, they must be allowed to fully mature before harvest. Next, they must be properly stored as to not acquire mold or other pathogens that can spoil them. Seeds should be stored in a dark, cool place and used within 16 months, or frozen for future use.

The most important factor in seed quality is genetics. To grow quality cannabis, you need good genetics. Some less scrupulous breeders will simply cross a nice female with a random male and sell the resulting seeds. Other breeders will take their time crossing and backcrossing plants to stabilize the most desirable traits, while still producing an array of different phenotypes. This group represents most of the seeds on the market.

Really dedicated breeders have worked for years to create “inbred lines”, or IBLs, that will produce plants with very little noticeable difference. IBLs represent only a small fraction of the cannabis seed market, as they are generally used by breeders and not by cannabis producers.


How Do Cannabis Seeds Germinate?
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In the wild, female cannabis plants drop their seeds as they die in the fall, then when the warmer, wetter weather of spring comes around, these seeds sprout and become new plants. Traditional outdoor methods used for centuries involve simply broadcasting seeds by hand onto cultivated fields.

There are many methods used by modern growers to germinate seeds. The easiest is to put the seed in a light potting soil mix covered by ⅛ to ¼ of an inch of soil. Keep the soil moist and relatively warm (50-70 degrees Fahrenheit) until the seed has sprouted into a seedling. Other techniques involve lightly scuffing the seed coat to ensure the seed is able to crack open, pre-soaking the seeds, and even germinating them in a wet paper towel until the epicotyl emerges and then gently planting them in the grow medium with tweezers. There are also popular products called starter plugs that consist of a small block of growing medium, often compressed peat or coco coir, with a small hole in the middle into which the seed is placed.


What Is There to Know About High-CBD Seeds?
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Cannabidiol, or CBD, is one of the chemical components (known collectively as cannabinoids) found in the cannabis plant. Lately much has been made of the potential benefits of CBD for treating the symptoms of many diseases and conditions. Through millennia of human selection for high THC content, cannabis with high levels of CBD has become exceedingly rare, as the genetic pathways through which THC is synthesized by the plant are different than those for CBD production.

Cannabis used for hemp production has been selected for other traits, including very low THC content, so as to comply with various drug laws. Consequently, many varieties of hemp plant produce significant quantities of CBD. As interest in CBD as a medicine has grown, many breeders have been breeding cannabis that has high levels of CBD by crossing drug species with hemp species; some of these hybrids have little or no THC, some have 1:1 ratios, and some that still have high THC contents along with significant amounts of CBD (3% or more).


Seeds for these varieties are now widely available online and through medical dispensaries. It should be noted, however, that any plant that is grown from these seeds is not guaranteed to produce high levels of CBD, as it takes many years to create a seed line that produces consistent results. There are breeders who are currently working on making seed strains with consistent CBD levels, but until these seeds are widely available, a grower who wants to produce cannabis with a certain THC to CBD ratio will need to grow from a tested and proven clone or grow many seeds out to maturity and have samples tested at a lab to determine the cannabinoid levels of each.

Why Are Cannabis Seeds So Expensive?
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Cannabis seeds generally sell for about $10-$12 each, a far cry from the $3 pack of tomato seeds you can buy at the local nursery. People are often quite taken aback when they find that a pack of 10 cannabis seeds can cost well over $100. It’s not hard to pinpoint the reason for this: prohibition.

The breeding of commercial crop seeds can be done in a relatively short time because of the enormous scale and abundant resources of commercial breeding programs. The general rule is that if you can grow more plants at once, it’s easier to locate and stabilize desired traits and is less expensive to produce massive quantities of seeds. Add to this new scientific methods of testing for desired traits using tissue cultures and lab analyses, and you have a great advantage over your average cannabis breeder.


Even larger scale cannabis grows are miniscule when compared to your average commercial agricultural seed production facilities. Cannabis breeders working under prohibition or strictly regulated legal environments are simply not able to work on this scale, and must take much longer, sometimes as long as decades, to produce a quality seed line. When you combine this restriction with the threat of potential legal consequences for breeders (many have spent time in jail), it becomes easy to see why cannabis seeds are so expensive. It should be noted that high cost does not always equal high quality, as the industry is unregulated.
 
Beginner’s Guide to Cannabis Breeding, Genetics, and Strain Variability
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Among all the colorful cannabis strain names on the shelves at your local shop, some crop up more than others: OG Kush, Sour Diesel, Blue Dream, GSC (f.k.a Girl Scout Cookies)the list goes on. You could assume, rightly, that these are some of the best, and therefore most popular, genetics on the market. Truly great strains earn a reputation with growers and consumers through reviews and word of mouth, with the best-of-the-best earning regional, national, and even international name recognition.








If you’ve become a fan of a particular strain and have acquired it from different sources over a period of time, you’ve probably noticed a distinct lack of consistency. There may even be times when a particular sample bears little or no resemblance to the strain know and love. Of course, differences in growing techniques, environment, and light conditions play a significant role in how flowers turn out. But given the exact same genetics, most skilled growers are able to produce results that at least are recognizable as the same plant. Why, then, is it so difficult to find consistency among different samples of the same strain? Answering that requires a dive into the murky waters of cannabis genetics and breeding.

Why Is There So Much Variability Between Strains?
Every spring, hopeful gardeners head to the hardware store to pick up packets of tomato seeds with names like Early Girl and Oregon Spring, visions of bountiful harvests of juicy crimson fruit dancing in their rain-drunk brains. While the outcome is hardly guaranteed, one thing is assured: All the plants grown from a pack of seeds will produce fruit of the same general size and flavor. In the cannabis world, this just isn’t the case.





Tomatoes, as well as most other garden vegetables, are monoecious plants, meaning they have both male and female organs on a single plant. The cannabis plant is dioecious; it has separate male and female plants, the female being the one cultivated for its THC-laden flowers. Dioecious plants are more complicated to breed, because you have to pollinate a female plant with a male plant. Seeds generated from cross-pollination of two plants present more genetic variation than seeds generated through self-pollination. With tomatoes, a staple food crop, breeders have dedicated considerable resources to breeding the fruit for commercial and home cultivation since 1940. Teams of scientists have spent years developing single varieties, selecting for traits such as size, flavor, pest-resistance, and drought-tolerance. Almost without exception, they’ve bred for uniformity as well.

Stabilizing Cannabis Genetics
Some cannabis breeders have also spent years breeding and crossing plants, often starting with a popular clone-only strain, in an effort to create a seed-based strain that expresses the traits of one of the parents. Even those efforts, though, yield some amount of variation across specimens. You could sprout ten seeds, and each will produce a plant that is slightly different in some way. The best of these seed strains are quite expensive and highly sought-after by commercial growers, who will often sprout 100 or more seeds of a single variety in order to find a plant that truly represents what the breeder intended.





The vast majority of seed breeders don’t even attempt to create a uniform strain. Instead they’re simply after a stable genetic line, called a hybrid. These make up a large number of the popular strains grown today, and it can take hundreds, even thousands of seeds to find one that expresses all of the desired traits. Unless a grower can locate an actual cutting of an original strain, it’s challenging and time-consuming to produce the “right” genetics. There’s always the temptation to sprout just a handful of seeds and sell the resulting product under a popular name, regardless of whether it is a good representation of the strain.

Murky Histories
Until recently, growing cannabis has been almost entirely an underground activity. As such, the development of today’s most popular strains has largely gone undocumented. A Google search on the histories of Sour Diesel and OG Kush brings up colorful stories of Grateful Dead shows and dudes named P-Bud and Chem Dog, as well as hours-long podcasts on the subject—but no positive proof of their origins. Plants were passed around the U.S. and even Europe by seed and by clone from as early as the 1980s and ’90s, and have been kept alive since then through breeding and, allegedly, even as original cuttings. At this point in time, it is impossible to determine whether or not a particular example of OG Kush or Sour Diesel is a true descendant of the original.




Now that cannabis is emerging from the underground, genetic testing should eventually make it possible to pinpoint a strain and even determine its geographical lineage. For now, we’ll have to trust growers and budtenders — as well as our senses and personal experience — to tell us if the strain we’re consuming truly measures up to its name.
 
Costs of Growing Cannabis at Home vs. Buying Bud at a Dispensary
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Cannabis traditionally has been produced on a small scale to evade the law for decades. As a result, many people have connections to someone who has dabbled in cultivation. With the legal market, however, consumers now can purchase an array of products without considering cultivation, much like grocery store produce. Grocery stores are supplied by farms that take care of the cultivation for us and grow a product at a reasonable price. This is, for the most part, also true for cannabis, but let’s take a look at the numbers and see how the finances compare between growing your own supply and buying it from a medical dispensary or an adult use retail store.


How Much Does Cannabis Cost at a Store or Dispensary?
The ability to walk into a store and purchase any number of cannabis products is a luxury that should not be taken for granted. Flowers, concentrates, and edibles that range in potency, flavor, effect, and smell fill the shelves of your average shop. Many of the products require expensive machinery and a high level of skill to produce. The diversity of flower and quality genetics is something most consumers could not dream of 20 years ago. However, these products are subject to high taxes and regulations that make packaging and distribution expensive.


Costs Estimates of Store-Bought Cannabis (click to enlarge)
How Much Does It Cost to Grow Your Own Cannabis?
Growing your own product has its own set of benefits and drawbacks. Taking cultivation into your own hands gives you complete control of the products used to grow your cannabis, giving you full knowledge of the process and a better understanding of the plant. It also allows you to explore growing techniques, genetics, harvest times, and curing strategies. This all requires time and effort, but sharing the fruits of your labor with your friends and family is unparalleled.


However, at the same time, it’s also important to realize the difficulties that can arise from growing your own cannabis. Pests, mold, and other diseasescan rapidly sabotage a grow and leave you with a bad crop. Additionally, if you’re completely new to growing, you could make some costly mistakes as you learn through trial and error how to raise healthy crops with strong yields.

If you’re curious about the approximate costs of growing your own cannabis at home, keep in mind that the pricing varies between growing indoors vs. outdoors, as well as the size of the space in which you’re choosing to grow.

Growing Cannabis Indoors
For our indoor cannabis grow cost estimates, the space we calculated costs for is a 6 ft by 6 ft grow space. We’re using soil as our growing medium, and only one room will be used for both vegetative growth and for flowering. Also, let’s assume we’re in a temperate climate where the use of A/C will not be necessary, which will save us some energy costs.


Not included in the price estimates is the cannabis plants themselves. For this exercise, we’ll use six clones to save space and reduce our vegetative growth time. A single clone can cost between $10-$30, but higher-quality clones can be more expensive. Our plants will spend around a month in vegetative growth and around 8-10 weeks flowering.

Cost Estimates of Growing Cannabis Indoors
Equipment Cost (USD)
Built Grow Space (6 Ft X 6 Ft) $250
1000 Watt Light Setup (Ballast, HPS Bulb, Hood) $200-$600
Metal Halide Bulb $30-$100
6-Inch Inline Fan $80-$200
Carbon Filter $85-$120
Six 10 Gallon Pots $20-$40
Two 30 Gallon Water Tanks $50-$100
60 Gallons Of Soil $60
Nutrient Starter Kit $50-$100
Hardware (Trellising, Zip Ties, Stakes) $50
3.5 Months Of Electricity To Power Equipment $700
TOTAL COST RANGE: $1,575 To $2,320
AVERAGE COST: $1,948
With a 1000-watt bulb, ideally you could produce up to a gram per watt. Realistically, as an enthusiast starting out, you might find yourself anywhere between that and a half gram per watt. This assumes you avoid pests and disease, and you feed your plants to keep them healthy. You should set aside an hour or more a day to observe and work in the garden to keep your plants happy.

Small Closet Grow
If a 6 ft x 6 ft space is unrealistic, you can consider growing in a much smaller space using a grow tent kit. The grow tents dimensions start at 2x2x5 ft and get more expensive the larger you go. You can buy a 2’x2’x5’ kit for under $1,000 that includes everything you’ll need to grow cannabis besides the soil and plants themselves. A kit will allow you to grow two to four plants in one to three gallon pots. In a space this size, you would most likely use a 400-600 watt light and have a return ratio similar to the larger 6 ft x 6 ft room.

Cost Estimates of a Small Closet Cannabis Grow
Equipment Cost
2'X2'X5' Grow Kit $900
Four 3 Gallon Pots $20
20 Gallons Of Soil $20
TOTAL COST: $940
Growing Cannabis Outdoors
Growing cannabis outdoors can be a very simple startup process. The largest concern is the climate in which you live. It needs to be sunny and dry enough to promote growth and prevent rot. Additionally, it needs to stay sunny and warm long enough into the fall to allow the plants to finish flowering. Growing in a greenhouse can help with the temperature and moisture-related issues with cultivation, but climate still dictates your ability to grow outdoors.


For this estimate, we will assume you are growing in a climate where the plants can be outside from the start of the season (July) to the end of the season (October). Again, we will use clones to start (which are not included in our cost estimates).

Cost Estimates of Growing Cannabis Outdoors
Equipment Cost
45 Gallon Smart Pots (5 Count) $80-$140
Soil (20 Gallons, 12 Count) $300-$500
Soil Amendments $100-$200
Nutrients $150-$500
Watering Tank (250 Gallons) $500
Mixing Tank (50 Gallons) $100
Water Pump $200-$600
Hardware (Trellising, Zip Ties, Stakes Hoses, Valves) $400
TOTAL COST RANGE: $1,830-$2,940
AVERAGE COST: $2,385
High yields of quality product can be produced outdoors. A plant grown in a 50-gallon pot should net you between 1-2 lbs of flower. You’ll need to consider the cost of the time you will put into your garden; an hour a day on average should allow you to take care of your plants. Some days will require nearly no time while others will require more. Also, the property required to grow outdoor cannabis is a factor. Most people growing outside do so on large properties for security reasons and odor issues.

Keep in mind that many of these costs will be lower in simpler, smaller gardens. Growing a plant or two in your yard can cost very little, especially if you already own much of the equipment from growing other types of plants and produce. Of course, many of these startup materials can be re-used for your next harvest as well.

Estimated Price Per Gram of Indoor and Outdoor Cannabis Grows
Yield Cost Price Per Gram
Indoor 6'X6' - 500 Grams $1,948 $3.90
Indoor 6'X6' - 1,000 Grams $1,948 $1.95
Indoor 2'X2' - 200 Grams $940 $4.70
Indoor 2'X2' - 400 Grams $940 $2.35
Outdoor - 2,000 Grams $2,385 $1.19
Outdoor - 4,000 Grams $2,385 $0.60
Looking at these totals, you’ll find that growing can be done for a much lower price than purchasing your product at the store. However, labor and property are not included in these costs. Someone will have to check in on the garden daily and spend time pruning, trimming, feeding, watering, and monitoring the plants for signs of disease, rot, or mold. Growing cannabis is strenuous and can be difficult, but if you’re looking for a new hobby and have the time to dedicate to growing, you might find yourself saving money and enjoying yourself.

Labor Costs and Their Impact on Price Per Gram
When including estimated labor costs of $20 per day for the growing period, the prices change significantly. (We adjusted the labor time needed for the 2’x2′ space at $10 per day because the size of the space is much more manageable.)

  • Indoor 6’x6′ space: $140 per week x 14 weeks = $1,960
  • Indoor 2’x2′ space: $70 per week x 14 weeks = $980
  • Outdoor space: $140 per week x 20 weeks = $2,800
Estimated Price Per Gram of Home Grows Including Labor
Yield Cost (Including Labor) Price Per Gram
Indoor - 500 Grams $3,908 $7.82
Indoor - 1,000 Grams $3,908 $3.91
Indoor 2'X2' - 200 Grams $1,920 $9.60
Outdoor - 2,000 Grams $5,185 $2.59
Outdoor - 4,000 Grams $5,185 $1.30
Reflecting on the costs between purchasing cannabis and growing your own in addition to the benefits that each method has to offer might have you clearly leaning to one side or stuck in a stalemate. Cannabis is not cheap or easy to grow, and chances are you will get higher quality, more diverse products at the local shop. However, if you want to explore producing your own crop and if it feels less like labor and more like a hobby, then perhaps a personal garden is the way to go.
 
5 of the Hardest Cannabis Strains to Grow
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As you develop your farming craft and become more comfortable in your cannabis garden, you might find yourself looking for a new challenge. One option is to explore strains that are regarded as difficult to grow. If growing for personal use, you may try to conquer strains that are not popular among commercial farms because of their long flowering periods, low yields, and specific feeding requirements. Large grow operations tend to avoid tackling difficult or risky strains because they’re often not worth the additional time, money, and labor.



Generally, growers tackle these issues by crossbreeding plants for high yields, short flowering cycles, and low-maintenance feeding requirements. For this reason, many strains that are regarded as difficult to grow are landrace strains. “Landrace” refers to feral strains that have long grown in one geographic location without hybridization. These varieties often have varying and specific needs, making them some of the more complicated plants to grow. However, plenty of modern hybrids can prove to be challenging as well.


Here are five examples of hard-to-grow strains that ambitious growers may consider if they’re looking for a challenge.

Colombian Gold
Colombian Gold is a landrace sativa hailing from the Santa Marta mountains of Colombia. Made famous over the century as a high-quality cannabis export to the United States, it made a comeback when its genetics were used in the creation of Skunk #1.


What makes Colombian Gold a difficult strain to grow is its large stature and long flowering periods. To produce this strain indoors, you must be on top of your pruning game; its growth takes off and will quickly overrun your space. The lengthy flowering cycle also increases the chance of error, but if you can bridle this strain, you will be rewarded with a classic quality landrace strain with an exceptional high that electrifies the senses.

San Fernando Valley OG
A beautiful California native, the SFV OG hybrid can be a tricky strain to tame. It has specific feeding needs and a flowering period that extends longer than normal.

OG genetics often require heavy feeding – specifically, they’re known for consuming large amounts of calcium and magnesium (also known as “Cal Mag”). You need to be able to read the plant deficiencies to ensure you don’t over or underfeed this strain. Additionally, SFV OG is a dense plant that will benefit from pruning and topping at an early age. If successful, you will be rewarded with dense, beautiful colas that offer a pungent taste and powerful high.


Dr. Grinspoon
This landrace sativa strain is named after longtime cannabis advocate and professor at Harvard, Dr. Grinspoon. The genetics are held by Barney’s Farm in Amsterdam and are well known amongst connoisseurs for its cerebral effects and quality of flavor. It is also known for its strange bud structure.

Dr. Grinspoon is difficult to grow because of this bud structure. It can take ages for it to flower and for the airy buds to develop any weight. “When mature, the colas resemble compact green and reddish brown beads,” Barney’s describes. “These loosely hang on thin stems.” The stems and buds are brittle, but the end product is something you will rarely ever see.


Chocolate Thai
Thai landrace genetics are being kept alive by a breeder in California by the name of DarwoH, and Chocolate Thai is a nostalgic strain commonly associated with the famed Thai sticks of the 1970s and 80s. Cannabis from this region of the world has always been celebrated and cherished for its unique cerebral effects.

The difficulty of this strain can be attributed to its lengthy flowering cycle. Similar to all southeast Asian landrace strains, flowering may take up to 14 weeks. If you have the space, time, and skill to produce a decently yielding Chocolate Thai or any other southeast Asian landrace strain, you have something to be very proud of and will be sure to impress anyone who fondly remembers days spent with Thai sticks.

Headband
Headband has become a very popular strain in the past years. With its high-THC content, Headband provides relaxing effects while holding onto the flavors of its parents OG Kush and Sour Diesel.

What makes Headband difficult to produce is its bud structure. Where OG strains are commonly known for their dense, large colas, Headband produces smaller buds that blanket the plant. Because of this, getting a decent yield with consistent quality can be difficult. Being able to use the SCROG (screen of green) method can help overcome this obstacle.
 
Odor Control Tips for Your Indoor Cannabis Grow Room
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Close view of an indoor hydroponic marihuana cultivation.
As much fun as starting your indoor cannabis garden can be, having a home perpetually filled with the smell of fresh flowers can be a serious inconvenience, if not to you than perhaps your neighbors. Although smells from a micro-sized, one plant closet garden is much easier to manage than a larger grow tent holding several flowering plants, either scenario can produce pesky odors that will permeate an entire home if left unattended.


Fortunately, there are a range of techniques that can be implemented to mitigate this odiferous opportunity which can be implemented in any sized indoor grow. If used in combination with one another, many of these techniques are capable of completely removing all odors in a cannabis grown room, leaving you to propagate worry-free.

Check Your Temperature and Humidity Levels
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The first step in proper odor management is to make sure that your grow space’s temperature and relative humidity are under control. High temperature and humidity will perpetuate any odor issues that your garden may encounter, though this will most affect your garden in the bloom phase.

Plants that are in their vegetative phase maintain a very low odor as the plants have not yet begun to produce terpenes, the molecules responsible for a cannabis plant’s aromatic properties. As cannabis transitions to its bloom phase and begins to produce flowering nodes, trichomes will develop. Being the molecule factories that they are, trichomes begin to produce these aromatic compounds in abundance.


As your plants continue to grow and transition, temperature and humidity become increasingly vital to manage in order to keep odors under control. Some ways to immediately tackle these issues include outfitting your grow space with dehumidifiers and air conditioners. Although these options will greatly benefit a closed space, moving heat and humidity out of a room may be the better place to start.

Make Sure Air is Circulating Through Your Garden
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Proper air circulation is at the center of maintaining temperature and humidity control. All grow lights produce heat in varying quantities. Smaller grow systems utilizing cooler lights such as compact fluorescents or LEDs may have an easier time suppressing heat than hotter systems like high intensity discharge (HIDs) or ceramic metal halides, but both will fry your garden with dangerously high temperatures if there isn’t adequate ventilation and circulation.

Ideally, air needs to move through a garden every few minutes during vegetative phases and every minute during bloom phases. Not only does air circulation help keep temperatures and odors low, it will recycle used CO2 out of your grow space. The easiest solution to air circulation is to outfit your garden with fans. Standing fans, oscillating fans, as well as ducted intake and exhaust fans will all do wonders in and of themselves, but when combined, they can move air through your garden in a matter of seconds, taking odors out with them.


When you’re looking to outfit your garden for the right sized fan, look for a CFM rating. This will give you an indicator as to how much cubic feet your fan is capable of moving through a space in a minute (you’ll need a cubic foot/meter measurement of your grow space for this).

Odor Absorbing Gels May Help
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Odor becomes much more difficult to manage in the final six weeks of a cannabis plant’s lifecycle. This is the stage where trichomes are producing their highest concentration of terpenes, and your garden is certainly going to try to show them off to you (and perhaps to your neighbors). Air circulation and ventilation aside, there comes a time when all of the air in your living space will contain traces of your garden’s fresh floral smell.

At this point, you may want to consider more rigorous odor management practices such as odor absorbing gels. These products work by attaching to odors and replacing them with other, more appealing scents. Keep in mind that odor gels do not eliminate odors, but simply mask them. Odor eliminating sprays help a bunch as well, but they operate under the same principle, not actually removing odors, but simply making them more pleasant.

Try Activated Carbon Filters
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If you want to destroy 90% of the odors in your garden on contact, you’ll want an activated carbon filter. Also known as “carbon scrubbers” for their ability to literally scrub contaminants out of the air, these devices employ activated and highly ionized carbon to attract particulates from the air. Dust, hair, mold spores, and volatile organic compounds responsible for carrying odors are all trapped either in a pre-filter or by the ionized carbon molecules inside of the filter’s main cylinder.

Filters in a flowering garden can serve one of two purposes. With CO2 supplemented air or in rooms very high in CO2, filters can be placed on the floor to recycle scrubbed air back into your space. However, most rooms utilize carbon filters with an exhaust, a great way to not only redistribute heat, but stale, depleted air as well.


Carbon filters come in different shapes and sizes and can be complemented by the addition of a duct fan. This will either serve to circulate contaminated air though your filter or to exhaust clean air out from your filter with the assistance of some ducting. Not all carbon filters are created equal, so be sure to purchase a reputable model. Filters come in various shapes as well, so outfitting a model that fits your space is key.

Like fans, carbon filters are also characterized by CFM rating. In many cases, the CFM rating and ducting diameter of your fan and filter will coincide. Most of the time, carbon filters are at their peak productivity when positioned at the highest point in your grow space. This is where the most heat will accumulate.


A temperature controlled, fully ventilated space outfitted with several fans and a carbon filter exhaust is capable of removing nearly 100% of the odors in your grow space. What this setup cannot eliminate on its own can be easily supplemented with an odor eliminating spray or gel. Furthermore, carbon scrubbed environments can bring the airborne bacterial counts in your space from a whopping 10,000 parts per million (ppm) all the way down to as low as 30ppm. Your local hardware store and/or hydroponic supplier should have everything you need to implement a similar system into your own garden.

Remember to always be courteous when growing indoor cannabis and understand that the odors associated with this hobby are not equally pleasing to everyone. Employing any one or combination of these systems will not cost you too much out of pocket, and the investment at the end of the day should pay itself over in the silence of your unhindered friends, family, and neighbors.
 
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