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Malawi and Zamaldelica Clones Guerrilla Grow

Azure

Well-known member
Veteran
Malawi
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Zamaldelica

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I'm estimating and hoping the Zamaldelicas clones finish second week of November. Hopefully the frost will stay away until then. The mother was a beast that went a full sixteen weeks indoors.

The Malawi clone looks like it will finish before November for sure.
 

gorilla ganja

Well-known member
Looks like you got the picture thing figured out. They look lovely.
Subed for the show.

Best of luck and may all your Buds be Huge

Peace GG
 

Azure

Well-known member
Veteran
Zamaldelica
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Malawi
The trics are all cloudy and fully formed. I'll take another look next week and see what they look like then.
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orfeas

Well-known member
Veteran
Fabulous!
That Jamdel reminds me of one that hit me nostrils with a hint of lemon flower or camomile...big fluffy buds was her gift... :)

:tiphat:Orfeas
 

Azure

Well-known member
Veteran
Update

Update

The Malawis are beginning to pick up a very light skunky & sweet scent.
I took some Malawi samples for a friend to try out and she and her friends loved it. Rated it one of the best weeds they have ever smoked.
Can't wait for the full finished product the Malawi will offer.
 

Azure

Well-known member
Veteran
did you prep the soil much?

These were reused holes from last year and remember that I couldn't dig deep at all because of rocks. Dug about a foot down for each hole.
This fall I was thinking of adding some amendments and nutrients to the holes hoping it will replace the what the plants used this year.
Can you guys recommend any good organic amendments and nutrients that I should put in before winter?
 

Anjey

Active member
Hello Azure! Your plants are looking great, your native soils must be okay on their own!

For amending here's my thoughts and of course this would depend on where you are located.

Select your sunny spots for next year. Cut/stomp down a nice sizeable area (say 4 foot out from the center where you'll plant.) Select "bioaccumulators" that grow locally, plants that are known to have large amounts of accumulated nutrients (horsetail, comfrey, nettle, alfalfa and the like). Mulch the area you tamed down with these plants you collected for free. Add some bags of local manure, exclusively grass fed cows being the best. Make a big fire with hardwoods and try to do it with low oxygen/or simply stamp out and take out coals and crush them as ash/biochar. Fresh water rinse then dry some seaweeds from the ocean. Take a few leaks onto the area while your working on it. Mix all this together and there should be no need to spend any money on any store bought nutrients and the plants should lack for nothing.

Next year all should be rich and broken down. Plant into the center and mulch around the main stalk. Plant cover crops around the rest of the area cleared. Since you are guerilla growing I'd guess you'd want a lush and not too flamboyant mix, something like clover, perennial rye, comfrey, fava beans, assorted herbs.

After an area like this is set up it should never have to be disturbed or amended much again. Act the part of a grazer and remulch with your cover crop every year. At most add in another bag of cow manure to the center where you planted yearly, then you just plant your started plant into that the next and you are set.

Just some thoughts, good luck.
 

Anjey

Active member
Also, apologize for the double post don't think I can edit yet but looks like nitrogen burn on some leaf tips which is surprising to me if you haven't amended. Maybe these genetics just need quite low nitrogen that your local soil has already more than sufficed?
 

dubi

ACE Seeds Breeder
Vendor
Veteran
Excellent job Azure :)

They didn't get very big but they are flowering very nicely, with big resinous flowers all over the plants. I think you got a nice resinous and early flowering Malawi killer pheno, the 3 Zamaldelicas look promising as well.

Regarding the soil amend, you can add worm casting and guano in early Spring and move a bit the soil before planting again in the same place, very nice guerrilla spot you have find ;)
 

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