Stealth Grow Fertilizer Nutrients for outside

weed4cash

Active Member
The best way to grow a stealth plant to healthy adulthood it to have all the elements of the plant food group.

I did very well with my stealth plant this year. The harvest could not have been better and all from just one plant. It will keep me will into the winter and the effects of this plant are close to hallucinations.

Here is what to do:

Take ANY place, I don't care how crappy the ground is and just dig a hole about 15" wide by about a foot deep. Add

5 gallon bucket Miracle grow soil mixed with Bloodmeal 1 cup
Bonemeal 1 cup

Also buy
food spikes

once planted, place food spikes in the ground around the edges. space evenly apart. (Just get the cheap plant food spikes for indoor plants)

Now dig out a fire pit and place a 5 gallon bucket of the ash on top of the soil mixture and around the plant.

You will notice that when you pour water on your plant that you can shape the ash into a bowl to hold the water and keep it from draining too far from the plant.

Why this works so well:

Ash
has phosphate. Phosphate is what your weed needs to digest all it's other nutrients. Any plant that has ash dumped around it will get bigger....try it some time.

Plant spikes:
this will give your plant the extra nutrients it requires as it grows. Weed is a greedy plant when it comes to nutrients.

Miracle Grow Soil:
this has most the nutrients you will need for a healthy root system. Remember that this is a weed and will thrive outside with out a huge amount of effort on your part. The extra nutrients will just help it become more potent.

Last of all let it get huge and don't worry about any one knowing it's there. My weed was in plain view of the lawn mower guy every week and he was clueless. Most people just don't expect weed to be growing right next to where they walk every day. As long as weed is at least a few hundred feet from view, no one will ever figure out the plant. The reason is because unless you walk right up to the plant you can't really make out the leaves. It will blend in to it's wild surroundings just fine and no one will know.

Important: when you water and tend your plant, make sure it's early in the morning. 4am is a good time. Carry your supplies in a cooler that would look like your lunch cooler. and always plant with in walking distance. Never take your car. use a bike if you have to or just walk. For water use two large pop bottles and put them in the cooler. They fit in there just perfect.

Last of all, use good seeds from these web sites. Your weed will be worth the money you pay.

-weed4cash
 

cazador

Active Member
I don't think the above is good advice. to much ash will certainly kill any plant. MJ is not a weed(IMO) and when grown in plain sight looks very much like what it is when it is in full flower (just when you don't want it noticed.)
digging a hole in shitty soil (even an amended hole) can lead to poor drainage and possible rotting when heavy rains come or you water too much. I have no doubt that weed4cash had great results. MJ can be a forgiving plant when grown outdoors.
I have seen a Lb per plant grown in the ground given no ferts in not the greatest soil, but I wouldn't suggest starting that way.
 

weed4cash

Active Member
Say what you will but the cops don't come knocking and if you are buying good seeds for out side grow you have nothing to worry about. Most people kill their plants because they try to grow inside.

Way better changes for a successful first grow OUTDOORS.

As far as ash goes. Try a plant with ash and one with out. See if I told you so...
 

gloomysmokes707

Active Member
it sounds like it would work... ive heard of african growers adding ash or burning fields before planting cannabis... but i have grown in micacle grow before and that shit sucks ... for a stealth grow it would work ...its like a budget growers soil... but stealth i could see why you would want do do things cheap. ie. the reason why you are going stealth in the first place.
 

cazador

Active Member
it sounds like it would work... ive heard of african growers adding ash or burning fields before planting cannabis... but i have grown in micacle grow before and that shit sucks ... for a stealth grow it would work ...its like a budget growers soil... but stealth i could see why you would want do do things cheap. ie. the reason why you are going stealth in the first place.
I only said too much ash will be harmful.

Wood Ashes as Fertilizer​


There has been considerable talk lately of recycling yard prunings and clippings as mulches and composts. Another source of recyclable materials is the ash from the fireplace or barbecue. At one time wood ashes were a chief source of potassium and much used in farming and horticulture. While not an important fertilizer anymore, gardeners with a supply of ashes often want to know if they would be useful as a fertilizer or soil amendment.

The answer is yes, if used appropriately. The benefits derived from ashes depend on your soil and the rate at which the ashes are applied. Generally, ashes contain potassium, a major plant nutrient plus a number of minor nutrients. Wood ashes contain all the mineral elements that were in the wood, except for nitrogen and sulfur which are lost through the burning process. Potassium, calcium and magnesium carbonate or oxide are present in comparatively large amounts giving the ashes a strongly alkaline reaction which can neutralize acid soils. However in soils that are already alkaline, high application rates can be harmful. A further compounding problem is that about 80 to 90 percent of the minerals in wood ashes are water-soluble, so that high application rates can cause salts to build up in soils, resulting in plant injury.

As a plant food, ashes contain 5 to 7 percent potassium and 11/2 to 2 percent phosphorous. They also have 25 to 50 percent calcium compounds. Hardwood (e.g. oak) ashes contain more potassium than those from softwoods (e.g. pine). If left out in the rain, because these nutrients are water-soluble, the ashes will lose their nutritive value. The less soluble carbonates which cause alkalinity will remain longer.

So how to use ashes? An average application is 5 to 10 pounds per 100 square feet, scattered on a freshly tilled soil and raked in. For a pre-plant treatment, it is best to apply ashes 3 or 4 weeks in advance of planting. They also can be sidedressed around growing plants or used as a mulch. A ring of ashes around a plant may ward off snails and slugs because the ashes are irritating to them.

In order to avoid problems of excess salinity or alkalinity, the applications should be limited to once per year. Avoid contact between freshly spread ashes and germinating seeds or new plant roots by spreading ashes a few inches away from plants. Ashes that settle on foliage can cause burning. Prevent this by thoroughly rinsing plants after applying ashes. Because they are alkaline, avoid using ashes around azaleas, camellias and other acid-loving plants.

Remember that ashes contain very little nitrogen, so your plant's need for this element must be met by other sources in a regular fertilizer schedule.
 
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