JustGrowing420
Well-known member
By the way was this plant you saw a variety like skunk or a russian ruderalis?
By the way was this plant you saw a variety like skunk or a russian ruderalis?
To put a cannabis plant of today (or yesterday) in a fully sterilized medium,
It was a "grüne Hessin" won't tell you anything.
Now I have tried so hard to provide as little information as possible in order not to get away from the actual topic.
What it really is about is the learned ability of cannabis to draw nutrients from a sandy, rocky medium. She still manages this splendidly today.
In addition, in spite of changed and adverse conditions, such an effective defense could be built up to protect itself. we are enjoying this today.
So I wanted to raise the question of who needs it more urgently.
who really benefits more from the symbiosis?
Just because we are dealing with bacteria and fungi does not necessarily mean that all of them serve our plant.
it is more of a trade between soil life and plant ... "you give me this ... i give you this"
and among them there are loads of parasites that deliver little but take a lot.
We know that about 2/3 of the available oxygen is stolen from the soil in a pot of soil, only 1/3 remains from the plant. at average r earth! Many use designer soil with only the best ingredients for their grows and add fungi and bacteria in abundance ... it can be assumed that this will turn the oxygen content for the roots even more into negative.
Wouldn't it be more sensible to expose the parasites and only promote and support the soil life which trades fairly with our plants?
Do you understand now what I'm getting at?
we should first identify before we speak meaningfully about a proportionality.
because too much soil life does not have to mean something good for our plants ... in terms of health, development and yield.
as I said, that's not the point. You have bacteria everywhere in every medium ... but different strains depending on the medium. Life and living space must be consistent.
my question is this.
if cannbis was able to learn how to produce strong cannaboinide with soil life in stony sandy medium and how to produce hops with soil life in humus, humulone and lupulone ... isn't it more sensible to look at soil life in sandy medium?
Yes, I understand now, the translation must be so that some sentences may not have exactly the same message in another language.
Warum sie eliminieren?
What many do not want to believe ... cannabis basically does not need any bacteria or fungi ... it also works very well without it.
Cannabis did not originate on a humus-rich soil ... cannabis originated in the sandy stony mountain regions.
I am sure that it was the soil that separated hops and cannabis ... hops in humus and cannabis in the sandy, actually very nutrient-poor medium.
if you take a closer look at the region in which cannabis originated, consider the period from when hops and cannabbis developed from a plant, you will not miss the fact that a mountain developed from a flat steppe at precisely this time ... by shifting the earth plates.
that means two fundamental things have changed for our plant within a relatively short period of time.
1. the medium
2. the altitude of the location.
This shift did not happen fast enough for the plant not to be able to adapt.
she had to develop new survival strategies. was exposed to a completely different climate, more intense sunlight ... also the bad rays.
she had to find ways to take in the little food that was in the ground ... she had to start doing chemistry in a higher mass.
it is a very exciting story in which fungi and bacteria play a very subordinate role.
The special thing about cannabis is therefore to also grow it in contaminated soil ... soils that are contaminated with heavy metals and poisons ... to clean the soil again. i have seen laboratory values of the soils before and after 3 seasons of cultivation. in the starting soil there were hardly any significant strains of bacteria and fungi ... after 3 years there were many ... but still no comparison to a soil that can be described as healthy.
the question arises.
who needs whom more urgently?
do the fungi and bacteria benefit more from a symbiosis with our roots ...?
the most impressive cannabis plant i have ever seen, stood on an old abandoned military site of the russians in the sand ... cih am not even able to describe it even remotely, so i do without it.
Cannabis learned opportunity from its hardships. I'd wager Cannabis contains more microbes than any other plant. I've watched the Cannabis gene pool utterly collapse, and it correlates with decline in native microbial populations. The modern grower is so confused, he thinks a native microbe comes from a local oak tree.. Native microbes are in the seed.. Until you've soaked it in all your snake oil solutions and anti fungal at every stage of its life.