Your Source for Cannabis Cultivation Information

The incredible potential of every cannabis plant starts with a humble seedling.

As soon as a seed has germinated and the first set of seed leaves, or cotyledons, emerge to gather energy from the sun, the seedling stage has begun.

The seedling stage requires care and attention to establish root and shoot architecture that will support a heavy yield of potent meds.

Small steps taken at this stage will have a big impact on the future of your plant.

Organic cannabis hits different.

When properly grown and cured, the complexity of flavor and effect is hard to beat.

This aesthetic difference can be attributed to the diversity of nutrients and probiotics available in living soils.

Growing Organic Cannabis is not rocket science, but there is some science involved.

If you invest a bit of time to better understand what is happening in the root zone, your quality and yields will improve.

Growing great weed doesn’t need to be complicated.

  • Genetic Selection

  • Site Selection

  • Soil Preparation

  • Seed Germination

  • Seedling Care

  • Transplant Tips

  • Sexing Plants

  • Water Matters

  • Feed the Soil

  • Pest Management

  • Prune and Trellis

  • Flower Development

  • Harvest Timing

  • Hang Dry

  • Trim and Cure

Cannabis transitions through three distinct stages of flower development with different challenges and opportunities.

Whether you are growing a few plants at home, or harvesting with a combine, you will yield more weed if you understand the different flowering stages, and how to get the most from each.

The potential for production of potent flowers is dependent on your decisions, so it is good to be prepared for what’s ahead.

This quick reference guide to15 of the most common pests and diseases is a great resource for anyone who works with cannabis.

Whether you are growing five plants, or five thousand, being prepared for catastrophe is the best way to avoid it.

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A lot of growers are leaving money on the table due to a failure of imagination.

The idea that cannabis should always veg at eighteen hours of light and flower at twelve is wrong.

Cannabis plants do not require total darkness to flower and trivial light leaks will not cause plants to “herm”

For those of us who are prepared to replace cannabis mythology with plant science, there are opportunities to improve yields, by better understanding our plant’s photoperiod requirements.