How to grow your legal six pot plants in Sonoma County
There’s a reason it’s called “weed.”
Cannabis is a weed - a C4 weed to be precise. C4 plants are tough, thrive in heat and dry conditions, and are an evolutionary improvement over the C3 plants that preceded them. Without going down the rabbit hole of organic chemistry, C4 means these plants turn sunshine and carbon dioxide into sugars built with four carbon atoms, and this tweak gives them their resiliency.
So, what’s this mean for the home grower, now that a few cannabis plants for either medicinal or recreational use are legal in California? (see sidebar) It means that you can kill your plants with kindness by over-wateringoverwatering them. Over-wateringOverwatering doesn’t necessarily drown them. They don’t like it, but they will recover unless you keep their soil sopping wet.
Growers I’ve spoken with, who asked not to be named, say the same thing: “Let the plants tell you when they need water.” When the leaves start looking a little droopy and lose a bit of their natural turgidity, water them and see if they perk up.
What will kill the plants, or at least ruin the crop, is white mildew on the leaves and mold in the flowers.
When you do water, don’t use an overhead sprinkler and wet the leaves, as that promotes the fungi. Use a soaker hose and let it run long enough for the water to seep deeply into the soil, where the roots are. Just watering the surface causes roots to grow near the surface.
What you want is for the plants to strike their roots deeply into the soil, scavenging for the rich nutrients you’ve put there. Make them reach for the water and they’ll also be well-fed.
The richer the soil, the bigger the plants. Enrich at least the top foot of soil with natural fertilizers for the best results. That means well-made compost, rotted manures and plant materials, and actively decaying organic matter. Never use fresh manure, especially from domestic pets that can carry human pathogens. Fresh manure is also too high in nitrogen and that can burn young roots. Worm castings are ideal. Well-rotted stable sweepings, especially where pigs or goats have been kept, are great stuff. Dig the actively decaying materials into the existing soil with a spade or spading fork.
Since each residence in Sonoma County is allowed to grow six plants on 100 square feet, that means two rows of three plants each in a square 10 feet on a side. Give each plant as much room as possible, and realize that as they grow into maturity, they will become very large - eight feet tall or more and six feet in diameter. Their branches will become heavy with flowering kolas (if you’re growing them properly). While they’re still young, think about how you may prop up heavily-laden branches. One way is to drive a wooden pole into the soil next to the spot where you’ll plant your seeds or seedlings. Then as the branches begin to droop as they grow heavy, run twine from the top of the pole to a spot about two-thirds of the way out on the branch and tie it there. Or prop up branches with slender poles, like fruit growers do to prevent heavy branches from breaking.
It’s a good idea to remove the lower branches from the female plants as they start to mature. This forces the plant to put its energy into the topmost branches, where the most sunlight stimulates the plants to make the most flowers.
Before flowers even form, however, you need to determine the gender of your plants. Cannabis plants are either male, female, or have both male and female reproductive parts on the same plant and are hermaphrodites. In order to produce female flowers without seeds you need to find the males and hermaphrodites and pull them out and get rid of them. See the attached box for further information.
As maturity nears and masses of flowers are forming, use a magnifying glass to examine the flowers for aphids, small caterpillars or other insects, and especially dark, sooty areas of mold. Remove any infested or infected buds. A few aphids aren’t much of a problem and will attract natural predators like ladybugs, lacewing larvae, and other predatory insects that will keep the aphids under control naturally.
When planted in early to mid-spring, plants will start to flower sometime after June 20, when sunlight starts to wane. Flowering really gets going in July, and you get mature kolas in late August and September.
Harvest when the little hairs at the base of the flower parts take on a reddish hue and a magnifying glass reveals white crystals covering the flower parts.
Dry the kolas on their stems by hanging them upside down in a dark, dry place that’s as cool as you can make it, such as in a basement if you have one, or an air-conditioned room.
The kolas are dry when the stem breaks with a crack rather than bends.
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