These weren't obvious to me and so I share for other newbies/wannabes.
1) When you are trimming your dense foliage with very sharp little shears make certain you have a good site line of what you are trimming - as opposed to cutting.
2) Hanging lights - I like an orderly looking work space. I hate it that the single point systems for hanging lights result in the lights pointing all different which ways. I want them lined up in a nice orderly row - especially now that I have on/off switches on the fixtures. Seems reasonable. BUT with the 2 types of lights I have used MH/HPS and now LEDs the hangers are set up with a 2 point bridle connected to the corners of the lights - one bridle on each end of the light. These then are connected at the top dead center to be hung from a single point. The SINGLE POINT CONNECTION is my problem. I have literally spent hours (over the months of adjusting the fixtures) trying to get those damn things to align. I have attached swivels. I have wire wrapped my light cords to the bridles in different orientations and with varying tensions. I have set up the ladder and reoriented the eye bolt at the ceiling. The lights just laugh at me and swivel to the opposite direction of their choosing.
TODAY I WON The secret and very easy solution? I ran a metal rod across the bridle wires that forced them all to the same orientation. In front of the wires of the center light bridle and in behind the bridle wires of the 2 outside lights. Instant alignment. Just because I could, I wire wrapped the rod to one of the bridle lines of the center light.
Anyway - I will never need to spend another minute aligning my lights! Could just as easily have used a broom stick (minus the broom) or any other straight length of something long enough to span the overall distance between the lights.
3) This next thought is speculative at this point (might remain so) but I share just in case...
I added live red wiggler worms to my 7 gal grow pots about a month ago. The plants seem very happy and the worms are thriving too. When I have done any trimming (see # 1 above) I cut up my trim in to little pieces then sprinkle them over the soil as mulch/worm food.
IT OCCURS to me that these worms will be teeming with THC and CBDs by the end of harvest . They could be a bonus enriched protein addition to any of your favorite cannabis recipes or perhaps simply dried out and served as crunchy buzz snacks.
OK - Hope you learned something here today. Glad I could share (for what it's worth).
Crow
1) When you are trimming your dense foliage with very sharp little shears make certain you have a good site line of what you are trimming - as opposed to cutting.
2) Hanging lights - I like an orderly looking work space. I hate it that the single point systems for hanging lights result in the lights pointing all different which ways. I want them lined up in a nice orderly row - especially now that I have on/off switches on the fixtures. Seems reasonable. BUT with the 2 types of lights I have used MH/HPS and now LEDs the hangers are set up with a 2 point bridle connected to the corners of the lights - one bridle on each end of the light. These then are connected at the top dead center to be hung from a single point. The SINGLE POINT CONNECTION is my problem. I have literally spent hours (over the months of adjusting the fixtures) trying to get those damn things to align. I have attached swivels. I have wire wrapped my light cords to the bridles in different orientations and with varying tensions. I have set up the ladder and reoriented the eye bolt at the ceiling. The lights just laugh at me and swivel to the opposite direction of their choosing.
TODAY I WON The secret and very easy solution? I ran a metal rod across the bridle wires that forced them all to the same orientation. In front of the wires of the center light bridle and in behind the bridle wires of the 2 outside lights. Instant alignment. Just because I could, I wire wrapped the rod to one of the bridle lines of the center light.
Anyway - I will never need to spend another minute aligning my lights! Could just as easily have used a broom stick (minus the broom) or any other straight length of something long enough to span the overall distance between the lights.
3) This next thought is speculative at this point (might remain so) but I share just in case...
I added live red wiggler worms to my 7 gal grow pots about a month ago. The plants seem very happy and the worms are thriving too. When I have done any trimming (see # 1 above) I cut up my trim in to little pieces then sprinkle them over the soil as mulch/worm food.
IT OCCURS to me that these worms will be teeming with THC and CBDs by the end of harvest . They could be a bonus enriched protein addition to any of your favorite cannabis recipes or perhaps simply dried out and served as crunchy buzz snacks.
OK - Hope you learned something here today. Glad I could share (for what it's worth).
Crow
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