thanks for the replies! I searched youtube for nutes and it showed these, i think they say 'orchids' for legal reasons. Thats the thing, im limited in funds
I couldn't agree more. Those "orchid nutes" might actually be for orchids or not. With Advanced Nutrients you know precisely what they're designed for...
That's why it's sometimes hard to get in your area, with names like SensiZym, SensiBloom, BigBud(even though there's a pic of an orchid on it), a lot of garden supply stores won't carry them.
Even though sensimillia esentially means "tended" or "taken care of"
Greefuse is supposed to be a great bloom stimulator, it is the same as b'cuzz bloom just more concentrated. But if you are thinking of using these 2 products as your base nutrients it will not work. These are growth stimulants and not general fertilizers. The NPK value of both of these are unsubstantial and will not keep your plants healthy on your own. You will still need to find a general nutrient package to use along side these stimulators.
I read that seedless and sensimilla don't mean the same, it's a modern misconception. But if you said sensimilla, everyone would know what you're talking about.
I'm actually terrible at anything with computers, but if you go to any spanish to english translator on the inernet or otherwise and just type in sin and semilla they literally translate to without and seed. Hope this helps a bit.
Damn, that is the dictionary definition, seedless marijuana.
I read in either Advanced Marijuana Horticulture -Mel Frank... Or Ed Rosenhal's bible that it's origins were from latin meaning tended, or taken care of.
Did you know marijuana was one of the first plants cultivated by humans, in ancient asia.
The purpose is unknown, most likely spiritual, or recreational, they have found artifacts dating back to 8000 BC, jars with preserved marijuana. There aren't any hyroglyphics(sp?) Documenting it's use, but important people were buried with some ganja.
I buried my father with a bag of weed and his pipe you know, just in case.
Marijuana was used for pretty much every possible use, just like anything else of those times. People didn't use a little bit of something and then throw away the rest.
They ate the seeds or made oil from them, used the fibers for rope/cloth, and so on. They wasted nothing.