Читать книгу The Cannabis Grow Bible - Greg Green - Страница 89
Guerrilla Farming
ОглавлениеGuerrilla growing is hard work and often prone to rip-offs. By planting in a forest or in someone else’s field or property, you are not in any danger of being caught with the plants on your property. However, the person’s property you plant on is put at risk. Be a good grower and do not plant on someone else’s private property. It is not nice and reflects badly on the cannabis-growing community. Find a public area, such as a forest or a hill slope. Look for an area that is away from the public eye, but will receive plenty of light. There are lots of places for this sort of thing, but spend time finding the right spot. Finding a good patch is the key to successful guerrilla growing. A patch near a river is ideal because it offers ready access to water and can help your crop survive a short drought.
A garden, an unused patch, a high enough wall and Paradise Seeds’ Sensi Star: the end result will be the proof that this space went to very good use. Photo Paradise Seeds
It’s never a good idea to camp right next to your grow.
Most guerrilla farmers prefer to keep it simple and favor the following method. They start their seedlings in small plastic pots indoors. When the seedlings have developed, and the plants are ready to enter the vegetative growth stage of the life cycle, the grower cuts the bottoms of the pots away and tapes a small piece of cardboard to the bottom of each pot. The plants, in their pots, are then taken to the grow patch where the grower digs holes in the ground, removes the cardboard and places the pots and plants in the earth. Then the holes are filled in with soil. This way the grower has germinated the plants and only needs to worry about secondary factors such as light, security, and pests. The roots will find their way out of the bottom of the pots and into the soil below. Don’t worry about the roots not finding a way out of the pot. They always do, that’s their job.