45 Comments

  1. Only 5 plants yeah. But you get 5 lbs of bud off each plant that size. Jamie knows what he is doing. I live in Southern New England USA. Botridus is always a problem here. I use a product called trifecta crop control. It works on all mold issues and most insects as well. It a blend of essential oils that are totally natural and can be used if flower. Check it out mate. Great video thanks for it.

  2. Just to put it in perspective my 3 foot tall plants need 1 gallon of water every 3 days. His outdoor plants need about 7 gallons every 3 days. Wow. Thirsty girls.

  3. To anyone dealing with fungal on the trunks of some of your plants I have a tip for that if you act quickly it can definitely save your harvest .. first you need to secure your plants with stick , tie them nice , then you’ll need a precision blade to remove all the affected area ( cut until there is no dried out material) once it’s done use hydrogen peroxide or aloes on the wounded part and let it dry out. It’s not 100% efficient but I saved soooo many plants with this technique … hope it helps some of the growmies ✌️😶‍🌫️ good luck for this year fam!

  4. Its called gentics genetics genetics 🧬.
    Start it indoors during the winter get her healthy and as bushy amd tall as possible.
    Then take it outside build a metal 2 by 4 inch metal screen around it with poles holding it to the ground bury it a foot. Allow the plant to bush out placing branches in each square as she hrows taller have a stop were u can access inside Just in case. And there you go real damn simple use nutrients and obviously dig out a hole and place loads of good treated medium inside the hole 🕳️.

  5. Good morning I'm a huge fan of your channel peace go check out my grow I'm from south Africa I'm growing outdoors and resently started growing indoors peace hope you enjoy my grow

  6. From my experience, smaller plants are easier to grow, harvest, cure and store. The bigger the plant- the bigger the problems. Anyone who's harvested pounds, in the rain, by themselves, knows what i'm talking about.

  7. Хорошие цветы Джеми!!!!! Уважуха!!!!!! Я выращюю манжурский канабис в Сибири!!!!! Меня зовут Андрон, мне 62года я курю 58лет и выращюю манжурский канабис в лесах и на болотах!!!!!!! Урожай бомбической!!!!!!! По высоте такие-же!!!!!! Что гашиш что ручник офигенный!!!!! Добра тебе мил человек!!!!!! И здоровья!!!!!! Курите братья!!!!!! Эта трава от Бога!!!!!! Андрон.

  8. It's easy to grow huge cannabis trees like this. As long as you have a few years of experience growing already they wanna grow that big. And I'm from New York State with a cold climate. Very short growing season and I get plants ten to twelve feet tall

  9. I wish I could send pictures of mine . I grow outside also. I grow plants that big
    I grow in the ground " not pot " .They do require support. a lot of food and sun .
    I've grown 12 foot plants

  10. We'd get something out of this if we knew what the growing season at your latitude in the southern hemisphere was. Also do you have frosts under 30 degrees F? I'm a firm believer in following a standard photoperiod schedule, which in my area means a November 1st harvest. Flowering occurs in August, September and October.

    I let a portion of my good plants self pollinate, leaving some buds on the plant. I bed under the plant with a thick alfalfa hay during the winter and continue to water sparingly. I start to get seeded sprouts coming up through the hay as early as December (that goes on until March!). I transplant them to solo cups and bring them inside cause it's too cold. They're near a window with no direct sunshine in the garage and I leave a fluorescent table light on 24 hours day, the family uses the garage as a smoking area.

    I try not to bring them completely outside until June, any earlier tends to confuse the plant, it wavers between vegging and flowering thus preventing the explosive growth that accompanies the onset of flowering. It stunts the plant, in short, and that's bad for marijuana.

    If I have self pollinated seed sprouts in April, that's ideal because the cold weather is gone, the plant is never inside, it acclimatizes to an uninterrupted outdoor solar cycle, has about four months of vegetative growth before the onset in flowering in July and August, harvesting 12-15 weeks later November 1. They are monsters and all I have to give them is water and whatever I'm rotting in a barrel for fertilizer, nuthin fancy.

    I can't grow clones outside because I don't have the facilities for large plants indoors. Regardless of the light cycle, once they go outside, clones stop vegging and flower, very small with inferior product. If I grow outside this calendar window, the plants are just smaller and less vigorous. To grow clones successfully, you need an enclosed greenhouse and a large outdoor area. My finished outdoor plants are 6 feet in diameter, spread 6 of those out in a 300 sq ft area and there's no room for anything else. Six plants are all that I'm legally allowed to grow

    You want big potent stuff, grow one crop, outdoors, sprout your seeds 7-8 months before the expected harvest date. You can't cheat mother nature, a January sprout may have to languish for months inside and the longer a plant lives, the more bad stuff that can happen to it.

  11. In Canada, the street lights were enough to prevent flowering. A newbie grower friend called me in the late fall, wondering when flowering should begin. lol He had to bring them into the garage at night and eventually finish them there with a heater while the snow was flying.

  12. One of the ideas ive been toying with and even experimenting with is growing outdoors, but inducing the 12/12 cycle at the peak of summer, by putting the plant into a dark room at 5pm, and taking it out at 5am every day and so far so good.

    You could tweak the hours, thats just the ones that suit my schedule best.
    But the idea being you get to use the sun to grow, but under the "artificial" timeline which is alot quicker.

    Best of both worlds, its like reverse engineering the reverse engineering of indoor growing.

  13. Location plays a big role. I grow the same size plants in NW US using super soil and compost tea. I get into the middle and remove all the small shoots and stuff that I know won't do much but suck up nutes and cause a lot more work during harvest.

  14. I throw mine in the ground and they get this big. The major things are to make sure they get full uninterrupted sunlight for at least 12 hours of the day, and watering them with fish shit and seaweed extract mixed with rain water. Other than that, I just top dress with gaia green all purpose for veg and then the gaia green power bloom at the start of flower.

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