Jeesh, well... all I want to ask is this... What makes one outdoor chem D taste like shit while another turns out to be legendarily good pot?how do you flush a plant that is growing in the ground?
Also, why has the best outdoor pot been the plants that were never fed, while the ones growing in lots of chicken shit or cow manure tend to taste and burn worse?
See, I respectfully, but COMPLETELY disagree that you can't flush organic mediums with good effect. Now before blind rage at my absolute ignorance sets in on you... let me tell you how I see this.
I think anyone with a clue about the organic process can agree that bacterium, fungi, etc reduce organic matter down to a soluble form that plants eat. Does that not mean there are often unused, soluble nutrients sitting in the soil that the plant has not yet taken up into itself?
In other words... The organic matter is reduced to micro and macro nutrients (N, P, K, Mg, Ca, etc...), and I think it's safe to assume that too much of these elements in soluble form at harvest time will effect the burn and taste of the herb. No?
See... I already know the answers to these questions, I'm just trying to understand why other folks don't seem willing to go as far as to admit this is the truth about organics. A plant eats the same thing, whether organic or chemical hydro... Soluble elements. We can leave too much nutrient in the plant at harvest time with either organics or Chemically grown.
There may be some need to explain my definition of "flushed"... to me this means the soil has been depleted of a food source. In chemically grown gardens flushed means all the given nutes have been used up or flushed away by a systematic overwatering. With organics this means ALL (or nearly all) of the available organic matter in the soil has been consumed by the microherd and delivered in soluble form to the plant. Again... the point is to harvest a plant that is drinking as close to perfect, pure water as possible. A plant drinking pure water is going to consist, mainly, of water and pure, clean plant matter... and the water dehydrates... leaving pure, clean plant matter. On the other hand... if a plant is harvested in organic soil that is still giving off soluble nutrients at harvest time, you ARE harvesting herb with unnecessary, fire retardant elements on board.
I have NEVER... EVER seen a well fed plant taste/smoke better than a flushed plant... (again... "flushed" --to me-- simply means not having access to soluble nutrients). I can ask, 'what's this plant growing in?' and the guy will say, "chicken shit", and I can see that the plant is getting too much nitrogen, and will taste like it's getting too much nitrogen, too.
Of course, it's also possible that this is about relativity... everything's relative. If your best pot experience sucks compared to another guy's best experience... you have a high opinion about pot that sucks compared to the other guy's. No one's fault... and I KNOW this is the case sometimes because several old timers have proudly handed me their weed, saying (or insinuating) it'll be the best I can imagine... only to hack and cough for all the wrong reasons. This WAS the best herb this guy had ever had... he had no better experience with weed, ever... But I would not smoke it, personally. It's all relative, and I wonder how much of the "no need to deplete the soil by harvest" crowd simply haven't seen the quality of weed, on a regular basis, that I expect from my own garden.
I expect people to take this in a matter-of-fact way, as I would. I know there's better weed than mine out there somewhere, but I haven't found it... I've found weed as good as my own, but not yet better. Again, I fully expect and hope there is better out there than my own... But as of now... I'm still waiting to see it. My herb is consistently of this quality not by accident... but because I understand the facts behind what it takes to achieve this highest grade of pot. Chief among the consideration that make for consistently superb pot, that burns well, tastes clean, etc... is THE LACK OF SOLUBLE NUTRIENT IN THE PLANT AT HARVEST TIME. It's not just nutrient, either... a plant eating its nutes will produce plenty of simple sugars/starch, etc... and will also not yellow as completely... meaning the chlorophyll levels won't diminish sufficiently by harvest time.
This argument about senescence is flat, IMO. The argument is that a plant will turn yellow on its own by harvest time because this is what they do naturally. Yes... perhaps if you let a well-fed Afghani go 200 days... it WILL yellow eventually, as it dies. But as long as the plant has access to nitrogen... it seems to keep a dark green, chlorophyll-laden color. So it seems second nature --to me-- that it's up to the cultivator to take control of when the plant has no more access to nutrients. The lack of nutrient access means there are no more dissolved salts and minerals being transported into the plant, and the lack of Nitrogen means the chlorophyll levels will diminish, and the starch and simple sugar content also diminishes. This process can be thought of as a triggered late fall event, orchestrated --purposely-- only by knowledgeable, experienced cannabis cultivators.
So please, someone, explain to us how it's okay to harvest plants with their roots growing in an organic medium that is still feeding the plant soluble nutrients. If someone has a real, sensible answer, I will listen and maybe learn something. But you'll be working against every personal experience I've had on this subject... Let's hear it.
BTW, I find this fun, so don't go getting heated thinking I'm looking to argue non-constructively... I'm certainly not. If I said this to you in person, I'd be smiling and truly trying to understand where you're coming from. cc