101 Already Asked Questions

RMayea

New Member
I'm completely new at this, I've been buying who knows what but I'm trying to find out what strain would be best for, lower back pain, insomnia, sleep apnea, migraines, and ibs. Can someone please help me. If I could get one kind that would be great. I'm tired of popping bunch of pills that don't work, so I started on marijuana and it helps me but not for everything. Thanks.
 

funksoulbrothers

Active Member
Thanks for even takin the time to put all this together folks! Been reading over this an the "Vocab/Slang" thread for the past two hours, some smashin info! Perfect for new-fish like ourselves! Cheers :)
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
Would you recommend hydroponics for a noob grower? Or should I try soil? Sorry I'm new to the forums
IMO if you understand electrical and a bit of plumbing, even with larger aquariums etc I would say jump straight into hydro. Hydro is in fact easier than soil. It's all in the mind set.
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
If plants are over watered do I jus not water them till leaves pop back up? They're seedlings bout 2weeks old n the 2nd set of leaves r dropping n curled in the worst, but the newer leaves r still looking good??? Help
If you find watering such a complete mystery maybe you should spend five dollars and get a hygrometer.
 

Joe Blows Trees

Well-Known Member
@bird mcbride Why do say hydro is easier than soil, especially for a new grower? Considering all the work it takes to run hydroponics systems, it's not recommended for beginners in all the information I've read about it. Getting through atleast one grow before trying hydro was the suggestion given by the different articles I read.
 

GreenThumbsMcgee

Well-Known Member
its probably best to get to know yr plant on yr 1st grow in a more forgiving medium. im not saying hydro is impossible to acheive 1st time around, but i gotta agree with JOE...get into new styles after learning the fundementals and technique.
either way, have fun and good growing hombre.
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
@bird mcbride Why do say hydro is easier than soil, especially for a new grower? Considering all the work it takes to run hydroponics systems, it's not recommended for beginners in all the information I've read about it. Getting through atleast one grow before trying hydro was the suggestion given by the different articles I read.
I don't get my info by reading articles.

Either which way, soil or hydro you'll require the same amount of venting, wiring, timers/relays for lighting etc. The difference is once I get the timers set on the watering it's a once a week change the res thing and some cloning and tending to the moms.

I keep the mix simple. I ph down tap water with dolomite lime(from a lumberyard) and mix in 1/6 of what the NPK instructions read for soil/outside. The spent res' go to the moms and clones.

A person doesn't need a big table, or a big res. A $40 bag of hydroton can do a small table, 2'x2'x6"/1kw hps and smaller and it'll still leave lots of hydroton for the mom and the clones.
600 pump $29.95
Digital timer plus relay $15
Air pump, cheap:)
Your creativity...priceless
 
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Joe Blows Trees

Well-Known Member
@bird mcbride Good info there, definitely do able. With over feeding/watering tendencies in beginners, soil is more forgiving which is why it was my choice, along with the fact I grow vegetables and others herbs and also maintain flowers and rose bushes outside including a garden. To each his own, as long as we're all happy growing! :weed:
 

Fin the Human

New Member
So my question will probably have no answer cuz I'm growing seeds from local landrace and will probably never know the genetics. But at least I know it's sativa...am just gonna watch it grow I guess.
Anyone familiar with Philippine landrace? Particularly the southern area. Sativas tend to grow tall. But plants here are rather short and they are flowering...the SLOWEST way possible.
 
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