Where and How Many?

According to #64, sect. 3b, 3c, 3d…it is lawful for ALL adult citizens of Colorado to grow their own meds, outside on their own property. We can grow 6 females for each adult that lives at a property. Certainly two adults can grow 12 plants. Without any case-law on this subject, we don’t know what the upper limits might be when it comes to the plant-count. I believe that 5 adults, living at an address within Colorado should be legally able to grow up to 30 plants there. No matter what, we are NOT supposed to sell any of the dried buds, especially to anyone out of state.

So, I respect the Colorado #64 law, as it decriminalizes growing some pot plants indoors or outdoors. But it is still a criminal event if you grow too many plants at your home property. All adult citizens of Colorado have the legal right to grow 6 pot plants…but  where and exactly  how many?

If you do choose to grow an outdoor garden, do it in full sunlight, out of sight, behind a fence with locked gates. I’ve already written about the “Plain View Doctrine” in past articles.

As your young pot plant germinants get big enough to transplant into bigger containers, use a diluted 24-8-16 fertilizer on them once a week. As we get into mid-July, I use a 20-20-20 fertilizer on the girls. As we move towards the middle 1/3 of August, I’ll use a single application of Super Phosphate to steer the girls toward flowering up. And I’ll use a Bloom Booster (low nitrogen, high phosphorus) fertilizer once a week. Then, about 3 weeks before harvest, I stop using any chemical fertilizers and just use plain clean water every day.

When your girls are “big enough”…that is a good time to switch to a bloom booster fertilizer. The girls are big enough when you think that they are. Are they getting taller than the fence? If the new leaves are growing out of the stem opposite each other, then that plant is still in a “vegetative growth stage”. If the new leaves are growing from the stem in an alternating fashion, then that plant is going into a” flower-bloom stage”. Also, I don’t fertilize when it is too hot…anything over 95 is getting too hot. The girls are just trying to stay alive and hydrated when their tops and roots get too hot. Wait until it cools down in the evening. Also in mid to late July, I start cleaning out the insides of the plants. With sharp heavy scissors, I cut out the big sun leaves from the plants interior. I also cut out the sucker twigs that grow up thru the middle of the bushy plant. I call ’em sucker twigs because they will only have one bud on the end of a 3 foot long twig where it breaks thru the canopy.

Certainly, cut off any big or medium sized leaves that are old and have turned yellow. The more often you cut the tops of your plants off, the more bushy interior growth you ‘ll be promoting. You probably shouldn’t allow your plants to grow up 8 ft or 10 ft tall. Every time you “top ’em” ,the bushier they’ll grow. That is good only up to a point. An overgrown plant will have a lot of small buds, it’s hard to harvest and trim. I like my plants to have an open-and-airy center. The primary branches can carry the load as far as flower buds go. I’ll let some of the secondary branches/twigs remain to grow and flower up. But all of the tertiary twigs will be cut off.

Keep your plants spaced apart to allow sunlight and air to get in there. Keep the plants watered and figure out a way to protect them from future hailstorms.

As you probably know, here in Colorado on the Front Range, we can have serious weather events, anytime. Especially in late summer. A steady rain mixed with a breezy evening can damage your plants. Flower clusters can hold water like a sponge and then they  get heavy. It only takes a few burst of wind to break off an entire arm or branch. If this happens, cut up an old t-shirt into strips. Use these long cotton strips to wrap-up and bandage these partially broken branches.

We may have to pull a harvest in late September or we may get to grow well into October. If it is up to me, I’ll pull a selective harvest whenever a flower cluster is ready, starting late September. I have spent up to 3 weeks harvesting a plant, only cutting off those flower buds that really are ready, allowing other buds to get the sunshine they want.

I have also had to pull a harvest in the middle of the night, in a rain storm. Figure out which TV weather person you can trust and watch the weather forecasts daily.
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Again…this is what is good for your pot

  1. Large container with good soil
  2. Adequate clean water
  3. Lots of direct sunlight, all day long
  4. Some clipping of leaves and some plant maintanance
  5. Lots of privacy

I use fertilizer to steer the plants’ direction of growth.

This is what is bad for your plants’

  1. Bad weather
  2. Thieves
  3. Politicians/police

So, don’t go nuts with too many or too tall.    Keep ’em out of sight.