Looking for Assistance on a 100 lb. Grow

Dionysus

Member
Well then good luck to you, I can be of no assistance since I grow only indoors on a fairly small scale( got to keep it legal). I don't know what your plans are after you have the 100 pounds but in some places they'd nail you to a cross if popped with that much weed.
Dont worry distribution is the easiest part for me.
 

SSHZ

Well-Known Member
Well, to be helpful, your main issues are : (1) overall soil quality- everything from pH to airation, (2) long season fertilization, (3) water availability, (4) security (humans), (5) bug and animal control, (6)control for fungus, blights, mold, etc., (7) hardening off of clones or plants from indoors, (8) weather issues, (9) harvesting, trimming and drying ALOT of pot.......... and a host of other things will need to be addressed. If you have answers for the above questions, you are well on your way. If not, ask away.

P.S. In all my years I have never had a Haze finish outside by Oct......... picked early maybe, but NEVER finished. Yours won't be done either!
 

wil2279

Well-Known Member
What the fuck are you talking about? 2.5 oz per plant, outdoors? You are aware he said outdoors, right?
ok outdoors plants may average more than 2.5 oz... but here is the deal, my friend has been growing for years and he put out about 12 plants this year and pulled just over 2lbs. now his plants were started as clones and most likely yeilded better than a plant started from seed. now it seems my friend gets roughly 1lb per 5 plants... this means it would take him 500 plants to get 100lbs... like i said... i am not saying it can't be done but it isn't going to be easy and not very likely. i hope he yields what he is looking for and then some, but i think it is also good to have slightly more realistic goals. I would think that with 60 plants, between 12 and 20 lbs would be a more realistic goal and if he ends up with more then he does even better than he was hoping
 

hic

Well-Known Member
Hello growers,

I am currently planning a massive grow (in my view) of a hundred pounds. I plan to grow 60 plants commercially to produce 46,000 g or 102 lbs.


Well first and foremost you better pray to your god, that he has mercy on your grow. I do not know the penalties were you live but mother nature can destroy your dreams in a F-in heartbeat. 100 pounds you must have one hell of a credit line to afford all the help you are going to need. I will work for a 100 an hour plus you pay the airfare and provide the women.

.
 

*BUDS

Well-Known Member
I'm extremely serious or I wouldn't be here asking these questions.
I think he meant if youve worked up to harvesting 100lb year then u wouldnt be asking Q on here ,you would be answering them. It takes a lot of exp to get that sort of weight. Try this as a rule ,what ever u est halve it and halve it again. eg 100lb=25
 

hic

Well-Known Member
I think he meant if youve worked up to harvesting 100lb year then u wouldnt be asking Q on here ,you would be answering them. It takes a lot of exp to get that sort of weight. Try this as a rule ,what ever u est halve it and halve it again. eg 100lb=25


hic, will second that.

.
 

grassified

Well-Known Member
Getting large yields like this takes time and experience, I am guessing you have little to no experience if you are asking this in a forum. I would start small and grow bigger later m8. If you really want a big yield on your first harvest just try to grow a lot of plants
 

d.s.m.

Well-Known Member
ok outdoors plants may average more than 2.5 oz... but here is the deal, my friend has been growing for years and he put out about 12 plants this year and pulled just over 2lbs. now his plants were started as clones and most likely yeilded better than a plant started from seed. now it seems my friend gets roughly 1lb per 5 plants... this means it would take him 500 plants to get 100lbs... like i said... i am not saying it can't be done but it isn't going to be easy and not very likely. i hope he yields what he is looking for and then some, but i think it is also good to have slightly more realistic goals. I would think that with 60 plants, between 12 and 20 lbs would be a more realistic goal and if he ends up with more then he does even better than he was hoping
On my personal grow this year, my smallest plant yielded a pound, and my big one over four. Does you friend grow in the arctic or something?
 

Dionysus

Member
For the record, with the proper genetics and under excellent growing conditions it is entirely possible. Any suggestions on growing with fox farm
 

Snow Crash

Well-Known Member
You cannot get Fox Farms soil. They are an American company and you live in Communist Cuba. You don't get our shit, and we don't get your cigars.

Good luck finding enough of a superior capitalist made product to put in your commie dirt.
 

Dionysus

Member
Wow, chill, it was a joke saying I was in Havana, Cuba. I'm American.

So can anyone give me some tips on working with fox farm?
 

upthearsenal

Well-Known Member
Compost, organic meals, AACTs, lots of soil work. No FF needed, unless you want to use their organic slow release fertilizers.

May I ask, why Fox Farm? and are you in a legal state, because if you aren't, lugging this stuff around to your sites could be risky.
 

researchkitty

Well-Known Member
The more I read this, the more I think this guy is full of shit.........
I'd bet he's either really wanting to do it, but doesnt realize what he wants. When you have a weight goal, it means you have a profit goal mostly, with little knowledge of HOW to grow that weight. If you grew at a minimum a few cycles before, you'd have a really good idea how many plants you'll need, how much space you'll need, and what types of things you'd want to improve over previous grows.

As soon as the poster listed the strains (Yuck) and then the 10 plots of land with 6 plants on a plot, it was pretty clear he's setup to fail.

My advice - grow small, learn what your doing first. If you have already done this, you just did a very poor job explaining to us what you were after. :)
 

dbkick

Well-Known Member
Compost, organic meals, AACTs, lots of soil work. No FF needed, unless you want to use their organic slow release fertilizers.

May I ask, why Fox Farm? and are you in a legal state, because if you aren't, lugging this stuff around to your sites could be risky.
I can't think of one state that having 100 pounds would be legal.
 
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