PDX Dopesmoker
Active member
Shimmering sexy South African-Northeastern Pacific bagseed hermaphroditic "male"
..and it's only now that they start to get fatter in the buds.. I will have to harvest them with a scythe, pick them up in sacks, and weigh them with the Roman weight scale from weighing the watermelons...
29-September-2020:
King Congo #1 (Congo Point Noire * South African Ciskei; born con the first May week; Tropical Seeds Company).
More secondaries branches:
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Thanks, axle2u. The spiders have been talking to me all year. In July I was checking my Zucchini, Squash and Pumpkins when I saw some type of veggie eating beetle. I reached for it to pull it off the plant, but, as soon as I moved my hand, a spider that was hidden under a leaf a couple inches from the beetle quickly descended and went back up again. I stepped away from the garden and quietly realized - the spider was saying, "chill, I've got this!" So, I left the beetle there and the others I saw here and there in the garden.
Same thing happened with the Alien OGs - I was busy pulling caterpillars off and crushing them on the ground when I saw the spider under the window sill drop down and quickly go back up again. I noticed there was a caterpillar in its web. So, now that's where I put the ones I pull off the plant in front of it.
Hell, I even left the aphids in the veggie garden after the spider and beetle incident! The aphids ended up migrating to male flowers that were really doing nothing but look nice and swarmed the pollen in the center of the flower - very little vegetative damage was done by them - they just went for the pollen. Also, their numbers stayed under control because the yellow jackets could be seen eating one or two aphids as they went in for pollen.
So basically my pest strategy in the veggie garden this year has been to feed them well. I even put bird feeders right next to my raised beds. They went for seed I put in the feeders and left my veggies and fruit trees completely undamaged! The veggie garden's ecosystem pretty much took care of itself this year as far as damaging pests are concerned. It was a big lesson for me.
Here's a yellow jacket coming out of a squash flower after collecting some pollen and eating a few aphids:
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29-September-2020:
King Congo #1 (Congo Point Noire * South African Ciskei; born con the first May week; Tropical Seeds Company).
Secodaries branches:
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24 hectares of marijuana — said to be Canada's largest crop — harvested in Rock Creek, B.C.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/brit...Z5S_Tii29zo-OH4syYETIDUbceApY_72ccdGqqtzWTMzM
Outdoor harvest is expected to yield 70,000 kilograms of marijuana for recreational cannabis market.
The harvest of 60,000 cannabis plants is underway in Rock Creek, B.C., in what is expected to be one of the largest legal outdoor marijuana crops in North America.
(How they think they will get over 2 lbs per plant is beyond me)
Looks dank....
What strain?
Looks a little like the Thin Mint I grew last year.
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24 hectares of marijuana — said to be Canada's largest crop — harvested in Rock Creek, B.C.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/brit...Z5S_Tii29zo-OH4syYETIDUbceApY_72ccdGqqtzWTMzM
Outdoor harvest is expected to yield 70,000 kilograms of marijuana for recreational cannabis market.
The harvest of 60,000 cannabis plants is underway in Rock Creek, B.C., in what is expected to be one of the largest legal outdoor marijuana crops in North America.
(How they think they will get over 2 lbs per plant is beyond me)