"yield per meter squared" means what?

glockstar21

Well-Known Member
I still don’t know exactly what the seed banks mean when they put in their description of plant yield “per meter squared or M2” is this suggesting that a square meter of the plants will produce up to the suggested yield and if this is the case how many do they figure you can cram into a square meter? Can anyone clear this up? thanks
 

premier

New Member
just imagina a grid box that 1 meter wide and high ( square ) put your plant in there :)

and voila u got 1 square meter... thats how i see it :D
 

moon47usaco

Well-Known Member
They are talking about compressing your plant and selling it like a piece of fabric or paper...

When you are done harvesting no need to cure you send you tree through a paper press and the M2 you get from that process is what you can expect...:mrgreen:

I would ask the site you see this on... That is a strange way to measure yield... =]
 

glockstar21

Well-Known Member
So there isn't really an exact science to it? Maybe 6-10 plants per square meter, does that sound about right for small to medium plants or 2-3.5 feet tall??
 

VictorVIcious

Well-Known Member
So there isn't really an exact science to it? Maybe 6-10 plants per square meter, does that sound about right for small to medium plants or 2-3.5 feet tall??
A square meter is just a little bigger than 3' x 3'. At 1 plant per sq.ft. you would have 9/ sq.meter. And decent spacing. VV
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
it can be one plant or 20 plants in 1 sq meter. depends on your growing technique. they consider this "canopy size". they are referring to 1 sq meter of full canopy.
 

SumDumGuy

Well-Known Member
I still don’t know exactly what the seed banks mean when they put in their description of plant yield “per meter squared or M2” is this suggesting that a square meter of the plants will produce up to the suggested yield and if this is the case how many do they figure you can cram into a square meter? Can anyone clear this up? thanks
Mr. FDD2BLK is absolutely correct. The m2 refers to the final canopy or final Christmas tree size. I've always grow many plant bunched together in my 3x3 but I will try just 1 plant this time around. Using a 1000 I should get very nice results.
 
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