The Truth on Organic Growing

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I will not comment on organic being better, because I have no experience with it. I do disagree that using chem nutes contributes toxins, or that chem nutes somehow equals dirty unhealthy pot.


From Skeptoid
Scientifically, the term "organic food" is meaningless. It's like saying a "human person". All food is organic. All plants and animals are organic. Traditionally, an organic compound is one produced by life processes; chemically, it's any carbon-containing molecule with a carbon-hydrogen bond. Plastic and coal are organic, a diamond is not. So when we refer to organic food in such a way to exclude similar foods that are just as organic chemically, we're outside of any meaningful scientific use of the word, and are using it as a marketing label.

I want to stress that I am not opposed to organic food. It is generally a perfectly fine product. I do have objections to the way it's marketed: It's an identical product, sold at a premium, justified by baseless alarmism about standard food. Whether you agree or not that this alarmism is baseless, you should at least agree that that would be an unethical way to promote a product that offers no real benefit. I choose not to reward this with my food-buying dollar. People who willfully seek out the organic label when buying food are being taken advantage of by marketers employing unethical tactics.

The biggest misconception is that organic farming does not use fertilizer, herbicides, or pesticides. Of course it does. Fertilizer is essentially chemical nutrient, and the organic version delivers exactly the same chemical load as the synthetic. It has to, otherwise it wouldn't function. All plant fertilizers, organic and synthetic, consist of the same three elements: nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. Referring to one as a "chemical" and implying that the other is not, is the worst kind of duplicity, and no intelligent person should tolerate it.
The entire article is long, http://skeptoid.com/episodes/4166
 

jamNburn

Active Member
Valid post. My mother in law buys organic milk and chicken for twice as much as the normal stuff. I do eat some organic items but mostly just because I like food that is processed minimally. And it's easy to find snacks that fit that description in the organic section. But organic veggies and fruits are kinds dumb. Unless your buying them with the conscience concern of fert run off. Which is a legitimate problem. I dont know that organic would stop it but it would probably lessen it. There are areas of the Mississippi river that are dead zones due to fert run off. Probably lots of river s , I just remember seeing something about the Mississippi.
 

woodsmaneh!

Well-Known Member
The one thing I like about organic growing is the smell of the buds as they ripen. Nothing like it.

By the way I grew with chem's for 8 years and never did I think I was producing anything but the best smoke I can.

I just wanted a greener and more earth friendly way to grow the herb. Peace Love Ramakrishna

BULLSHIT I was just lazy and knew there had to be a better way and along the way organics happened, I got ton's of time back, loads of money, and don't toss anything our. The best part is I now grow more and better than I ever have, all I do is water. And I can act all superior to the chem growers, LMFAO

Peace
 

2blunt

Member
One of my pet peaves with chem growers is that alot of them..... not all of them BUT alot of them don't realize that they have to flush the system out. I know most of them do but not for the propper amount of time. If the ash on your end product is black and hard when smoking it then you need to spend more time flushing. Or just forget chemicals all together and grow organicaly so you have the most perfect bud at the end.
 

CptNemo

Well-Known Member
First time grower here. I put 4 seeds in with my veggie garden. Dirt with some potting soil mixed in. I used a generic pellet fetelizer from walmart in the soil. Watered every couple days if no rain. Had one problem lacking some N. I added some MG to the watering can for a week. Ive now got 6 & 7 footers budding like crazy. I may start adding some molassas to the water. More than a few people have rcomended it to me. But VERY LITTLE work on my part. Maybe $20 per plant spent. I will be growing again next year but indoor. So costs will be a little higher with lights and such but Im keepin my ladies in soil. I just dont see the need for all the extra $$ and hassle.
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