Guerrilla Gardening For Outdoor Marijuana Growing
Guerrilla farming refers to farming away from your own property, or in a remote location of your property where people seldom roam
around. It is possible to find locations that for one reason or another are not easily accessible or are privately owned. Try to
grow off your property, on adjacent property, so that if your plot is found, it will not be traceable back to you. If it's not on
your property, nobody has witnessed you there, and there is no physical evidence of your presence (footprints, fingerprints, trails,
hair, etc.), then it is virtually impossible to prosecute you for it, even if the cops think they know who it belongs to.
Never admit to growing, to anyone.
Your best defence is that you're just passing thru the area, and noticed something you decided to take a look at, or carry
a fishing pole or binoculars and claim fishing or bird watching. Never tell anyone but a partner where the plants are located. Do
not bring visitors to see them, unless it is harvest time, and the plants will be pulled the same or following day. Make sure
your plants are out of sight. Take a different route to get to them if they are not in a secure part of your property, and cover the
trail to make it look as if there is no trail. Make cut backs in the trail, so that people on the main trail will tend to miss the
cut-back to the grow area.
Don't park on the main road, always find a place to park that will not arouse suspicion by people that pass on the road.
Have a safe house in the area if you are not planting close to home. Always have a good reason for being in the area and have the necessary
items to make your claim believable. Briar and poison oak patches are perfect if you can cut through it. Poison Oak must be washed
away before an allergic reaction takes place. Teknu is a special soap solution that will deactivate poison oak before it has
time to create a reaction. Apply Teknu immediately after contact and take a shower 30 mins. later.
Try to plant under trees, next to bushes and keep only a few plants in any one spot. Train or top the plants to grow
sideways, or do something to prevent the classic christmas tree look of most plants left to grow untrained. Tying the top down to
the ground will make the plants branches grow up toward the sun, and increase yield, given a long enough growing season. Plants can
be grown under trees if the sun comes in at an angle and lights the area for several hours every day.
Plants should get at least 5 hours of direct sun every day, and 5 more hours of indirect light. Use shoes that you can
dispose of later and cover your foot prints. Use surgical gloves and leave no fingerprints on pots and other items that might ID you to the
fuzz...in case your plot is discovered by passers by. Put up a fence, or the chipmonks, squirles and deer will nibble on your babies
until there is nothing left. Green wire mesh and nylon chicken fencing net work great and can be wrapped around trees to create a
strong barrier.
Always check it and repair every visit you make to the garden. A barrier of fishing line, one at 18" and another at
3' will keep most deer away from your crop. Gopher Granola is available for areas such as the N. CA mountains, where wood rats and
gophers will eat your crop if given any opportunity to do so. The best fence in the world will not keep rats away from your plants! Do
not use soap to keep dear away, it will attract rats! (The fat in the soap is edible for them.) Put the poison grain in a feeder
than only small rodents can enter, so that birds and deer can't eat it. Set out poison early, before actual planting. The rats must eat the
grain for several days before it will have any effect on them.
Ultimately, you may find it's easier to grow in a greenhouse shed in your own backyard rather than try to keep the rats
from eating your outdoor plot. When growing away from the house, in the wild, water is the biggest determining factor, after security. The
amount you can grow is directly proportional to the water available. If you must pack-in water, carry it in a backpack in case your seen
in-route to your garden; you will appear to be merely a hiker, not a grower.
Transporting vegatative starts to the growing area is a most tricky aspect of growing outdoors. Usually, you will want to
start plant indoors, or outside in your garden, then transport them to the grow site once they are firmly established. It may be desirable
to first detect and separate males from females so that no effort of transporting/transplanting/watering
males is incurred. One suggestion is to use 3" rockwool cubes to start seedlings in, then put 20 of
them in a litter pan, cover it with another pan, and transport this to the grow site. The cubes can be planted directly into soil. If
spotted inroute to the grow area, burying a dead cat may be a good excuse for being in the area.
Few people would demand to see the rotting corpse! One outdoor grower we know has given up on marijuana seeds. He has several strains he likes to clone, so he starts 200 clones in his closet, then transports them outdoors in boxes to the grow site. No males, no
differentiation, no weeding, no germinating seeds, no genetic uncertainties, no crops
grown for seed, no transporting/transplanting/watering plants your just going to pull up later, no pollination nightmares, no wasted
effort!
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