All is good broā¦ got my work cut out for me now thatās for sure.
Laws have changed here now bro. We can legally have and sell unlimited seedlings and vegging plantsā¦ Allowed 8 flowering plants. Can have unlimited seedsā¦ can give away 100grams at a time to anyone we want or 3 flowering plants. Can hold 1.2 kg at home at any time. Shit itās even illegal for them to arrest a 16 ywar old for weed anymore. A court case was also just won regarding growing for people. So with 100 signatures I can flower 800 plants .
Pretty cool
Amazing! All of it! The new law, new farm, growing things for people in need! Wow! Iām so proud to call you my friend! Absolutely wonderful. Way to be, my friend Blessings!
Hi to all of you in SA
It must be a good place for living now. Regardles cannabis. Social circumstances seem to be a different story
I have been in Richard bay several times(2006) and i had hard time to get some weed. Maybe it was not so hard, but i hadnt have enough time to meet right people. Coal was loaded realy fast.
Do you or anybody else maybe know what was commercialy grown around Bay in those days. There was two distinct sativas. One was light green, potency was fairā¦ Other one was darker, with elongated buds, slightly weaker, but quality of high was superior. All I could find about them is that it was local weed.
And I have one totaly offtopic question.
I was suprised when i saw brand new Golf I on streets. I immediately wished one for myself. Does quality is similar as old german lines? When I was kid we had have one and I have happy memories about it. I still want one.
One night with friends, full of beer and smoke, we agreed to go to the SA football World Cup and return home to southern Europe with a few used Golfs.
But who knows, if we get drunk and smoke together more often, we might as well do it.
Bro, Iām amazed. Thatās exciting. Iām still interested in the āfood for people that canāt get good foodā movement.
Your greenhouse reminds me of a place I saw on YouTube. The farm is in New York I believe. I canāt think of the name but will find it.
They put the greenhouses on rails and they could roll them to a new spot season to season. They also invented a bunch of their tools.
Seems like itās called Neverā¦ something
Man, if things change for me Iād love to visit someday. What city would you fly into and out of? I can dreamā¦ It would be cool to find out the price of a ticket.
Best vibes on the new life. I really dig the concept. peace
Are those Ridgebacks that you have there? They look like very fit working dogs. Every Ridgeback Iāve seen here in the US has been overweight, just like their owners. Itās almost shocking when you see a Yellow Lab or Golden Retriever that isnāt grossly overweight here.
The look of the soil is so distinct. Are you using the native soil with no amendments?
They are Pitbulls (Stonewall/Jeep/Redboy and Mayday/Machobuck lines) ā¦ definitely in good shape hehe.
The soil im using is a rich native soil that we dug out when flattening the greenhouse area. I added some kelp, gypsum, lime, bonemeal, compost , wc , potasium humste and a pinch of fulvic acidā¦ should work good i hope
Ahhh, game bred lines. No wonder they have that beautiful structure. The Jeep influence is apparent in those beautiful heads. As you probably know, the ābullyā look is what dominates over here. Iām from Arizona and I was lucky enough to have a couple old blood Heinzl and Colby bulldogs over the years and an awesome Chinaman dog too.
The greenhouses are going to be awesome. That soil is just a beautiful color that reminds me of the summer nights I spent playing on a baseball infield and stealing bases like Rickey Henderson.
Bullyās are big bucks here ā¦ go with them muscle folk hahaā¦ I prefer my little 14kg dogs to those things any day. Never been much of a Chinaman Frisco fan. Closest I had was a Frisco Bolio Bullyson dog. Good looking thatās for sure.
Thanks Grampsā¦ right now Iām hand feeding the potted plants using a submersible pump. The beds are getting drip lines down them ā¦ thinking gravity feed em.