Alright, this is John Kohler with growingyourgreens.com. Today we have another exciting episode for you and I'm coming here at you from the North Bay here in good old California. And where I'm at today is I'm at one amazing garden slash farm, whatever you want to call And here I'm amongst like a wall of tomatoes with tons of tomatoes on there.
We got rhubarb and tree collards and this guy right here, the tomatillos like fully in bloom and flower and producing fruit. But unfortunately, for a lot of you guys, I'm not talking about vegetables today. We're going to be talking about another very important medicinal herb known as cannabis or marijuana. I prefer the term cannabis myself.
And in this episode, we're going to go into the greenhouse you guys see behind me. And what we're going to do in this episode is actually not talk about the tomatillo blooms here, but this topic about bloom survival 101 can apply to your tomatillos, tomatoes, anything in your garden that blooms. blooms and goes to flower and then will consequently go to fruit.
And whether you want to stop that process at a certain point or get the fruit out of it, because I know a lot of people have challenges with getting their plants to bloom and getting through the bloom, whatever they may be. But the specific reason for this episode is directed at people who grow cannabis, also known as marijuana. I prefer the term cannabis, of course, and to let you guys know that I do not get high because people always say. say that I get high and all this stuff, I'll post a link down below to a video where I did get high and I talk about why I actually don't like to get high or don't get high on a regular basis.
But I do fully approve the use of cannabis in the terms and the sense that it is an amazing food and to me the side effect or the undesired effect is actually getting that psychoactive effect. I want all the other beneficial medicinal benefits. From the cannabis plant and unfortunately I believe these are not talked enough about and everybody always talks about the psychoactive side effects for me anyways.
Some people that's like their primary effect. But anyways let's get into the greenhouse over here and show you guys how they get through. Survive the bloom and more importantly than that, make amazingly large blooms with stacked flowers with no mold or mildew problems. And as you guys can see, we're walking in and check this out, this is the first clue they're doing, they're doing light depth. So that means they're shortening the day length and this causes the plants to act a little bit differently.
So now I want to walk you guys into this impressive grow in just this little greenhouse made with PVC pipe, doesn't cost a lot of money and some plastic over the top. Let's check it out. Now in this grow there's about 50 plants or so and check out how amazing this looks.
I mean inside here, I mean number one when I walked in like I don't see any mold or powdery mildew. It's amazing for August here because it's starting to get a little bit cooler. cooler in this area. And you know, I mean, so many people have challenges getting to the bloom, but even more importantly like stacking.
Look at this, this thing is like totally stacked all kinds of flowers. And you know, there's many different tips that the grower here is using to make this happen, to make this really dense canopy inside here grow on. So let me go ahead and take you guys through this and show you guys a little bit.
So this is like a corn maze, it's a cannabis maze, I can barely get through here and I don't want to break too many branches at the same time. This is some really beautiful stuff in here, check it out. Oh and it smells amazing in here too, like I love the smell of cannabis, I mean this goes back to my high school days when I would actually grow it in my closet. So I'm just headed through the cannabis jungle here, literally it's kind of insane over here, we open up a little bit in the middle here so this is kind of nice. But you know, just like the The grower here spends some good amount of time doing maintenance in the garden much like at my house, you know, when I'm doing my vegetable gardening, I'm out there like every day checking on stuff, you know, trimming things, making sure everything's going right as possible and I mean that's probably one of my biggest tips to you guys.
You need to spend time in your garden no matter. whatever crop you're growing and be perceptive and aware of what's going on and more importantly take immediate action if you see something happening that is going awry. I think the next thing I'd like to do in this episode is actually bring in the grower herself.
Yes, it's a girl. The knows a lot about growing. The's been growing actually cannabis professionally for over 10 years now and yeah, let's get her in with some of these tips so you guys can survive. So now I'm with the amazing farmer.
That's actually made all this happen and has been growing cannabis professionally for over 10 years now. And yes, she's a girl. And check this out, you guys are going to love her name.
Her name is Mary Jane. So Mary Jane, thanks for being on the show today and thanks for inviting me out to your farm here. Thank you very much John.
I have enjoyed your videos for a long time. huge inspiration over the years to me too. I mean that truly. So I've learned a lot from you, picked up a lot and I hope that a lot of my techniques are coming through in what you see here.
So thank you. Yeah, no, it totally looks amazing. I'm glad to be here and it just smells so nice and you know just some of the food that I've been able to eat today is quite special.
So the first thing I think I want to ask is actually why did you get into growing cannabis in the first place? I originally got into it myself because I loved the plant. I found it very soothing and then very shortly afterwards I found out a lot of my medical problems were caused from a pituitary brain tumor.
So, I got into growing my own medicine and then realizing how important it was for the quality to come through for other people as well. You know, you are what you eat, you are what you put into your body, and so growing it and creating it myself became really, really important to me in my life. Wow, and actually that's the same exact reason why I started growing my own food, because I had health challenges.
I was able to overcome and I determined the reason why that happened is because of the poor quality and poor food choices I was making. And even then when I started making improvements and eating better, I found that I could eat food quality that you just buy in the local store in the supermarket is just not that good quality. They have to pick it early because it's shipped far, they use synthetic chemicals and even some organic farming is not the best way you could grow food crops and likewise.
guys, when growing cannabis. Unfortunately people that go down to their local dispensary all the time are just buying cannabis and it may not be grown with the best practices. It may be grown with chemicals, right?
And this imbalances the end product. It also may be contaminated more importantly with pesticides and other nasty chemicals that you definitely don't want to be ingesting that aren't even legal to put on food crops where they're putting it on cannabis that then people ingest. And I think this is really sad. And you know, I'm I'm here today to show you guys a better way how to get your plants through the bloom process and survive it and more poorly thrive create higher yields by doing it through organic methods. So Mary Jane I love your name.
So why what are some techniques to use to get to where you got today. How are you making this possible and what have you learned over the 10 years you've doing this? You know, one thing, John, I wanted to add back to what you just said, too, about the cannabis in dispensaries goes back to the news reports that have come out about there will be fungal pathogens as well in dispensary cannabis. Fungus in the cannabis fungus among us John So with that said that goes into the applications that go into gardens like this the organic applications rather than using synthetic Fungicides that are well known Michael Bouton ill that's in the cannabis industry.
Unfortunately, that's overused Creates a cyanide once Yeah anyway another day, another topic. But anyway, so the natural methods of preventing those things and creating big blooms in a compacted canopy like this as well, it really goes to… I mean, how big is this, how big is the greenhouse here? This footprint is only about, I don't know, 18 foot by 18 foot. So 18 by 18, that's quite small to have 50, 52, 54 plants in like 10 gallon pots. Absolutely, it's very tightly compacted in here and there are several… Most people would think you're crazy actually.
Oh absolutely. Because if you're too close you're not getting enough air circulation. I mean you've got a couple of fans, we turned a few off for the video but how does this work?
It works because basically the inputs that they're given to it. We keep, we do keep air flow really critical in here. We keep maintenance, maintenance is huge.
the canopy from below going upward always. So anything removing, defoliating, cutting out anything thin so that only the tops of the canopy, the true buds production is really what's focused upon. So to have an amazing cannabis grow like this, I'm sure you have to do many different techniques much like I have to do in my garden to have good healthy pepper plants or tomato plants.
I got to start with a good solid foundation or base. So Mary Jane, why is it important to start with a good base when you're growing your plants like the good soil and having the good growing practices? So that you could be more successful, you know, in bloom. Yeah, John, it definitely starts with the soil biome.
The microbial life, all of that, it plays together. And what lives below that you can't see, in the end, is what you see above. It's like the roots of a tree, you know. You have healthy roots below and that's what you see grow above.
And a lot of my practices that I've learned have come from books. I'm a little bit of a bookworm. And not to lose teaming with microbes in there and teaming with nutrients, I'm a huge fan of true living organics.
This is an excellent, excellent reference. You can learn a lot about what... building soil life is involved and how to get those nutrients in there. Most of the techniques and applications that you yourself use and apply in your garden can be found explained in this book.
That's cool. Yeah, I mean, I've heard of that book, I've never read it myself because I'm not into growing cannabis, but if you're into growing cannabis, that is the book you definitely want to buy. Even if you're into growing vegetables, you know, you could use the techniques in that book because that's actually the techniques that I use even though I've never read the book.
I just do good gardening or more important, what I like to call organic biologic gardening. And that's simply what Mary Jane is doing here also. So the next thing that's really important to have a successful bloom.
bloom is of course maintenance. I kind of talked about this a little bit earlier, but what is some of the maintenance you do here and why is it so important to do? John, definitely I would say thinning and defoliating is a huge part of maintenance here in this specific garden. Just because the footprint of this greenhouse is so small, I try to keep it as densely packed as I can. To get the best value out of it that we can.
And since it's light deprivation, it's not just one season. We control entirely how much the plants grow, their full size, etc. So defoliation is a major, major piece of maintenance, as well as things like I do a bit of Korean natural farming, and I ferment lactobacillus, I make my own EM, the effective microbes.
And I do a lot of foliar feeding with it pre-flower. So I think that helps keep them healthier in general. That's a huge maintenance factor that happens in here.
So one of the things I noticed here is that there's like, I haven't seen any pests. I mean I have some pests in my outdoor garden, but in this indoor grow, you know, it's easier to control and keep pests away. But you know, things like mold and mildew and fungus could get in regardless of… The enclosure here, so how do you deal with different kinds of pests and mold and fungus here in the greenhouse? That's a great question. And why is it important, you know, for successful and surviving the bloom?
You know, honestly John, that's part of maintenance in here as well and if we don't prevent it happening there's not a whole lot that can be done once it goes into flower and so preventative maintenance includes like insect frass as well that's really helpful I do a lot of neem seed meal drenching with teas earthworm castings with the nematodes in there and I think the foliar with that lactose spray as well is a huge factor of why you don't see anything in here at all So you're doing this on a regular basis, so do you come in here and preventively spray anything, or is that as needed, or what? The spraying usually is involved mostly in the vegetative stage, so I try to get the plants big and healthy in the first place. So when they get into this stage, I don't give them much input. I want them to be completely organic so you get the full flavor from the final product. Right, yeah, we didn't even talk about that earlier.
Besides not having sprays. On organically grown cannabis or I guess the certification is actually clean green, there's better flavor profile so it tastes a lot better. There's different kinds of nutrients, I would say antioxidants and phytonutrients in there if you guys are eating it. But for those of you guys that aren't, there's like, you know, more and different varieties of terpenes in there that are really good and healthy for us. So besides controlling the light and having a 12 on, 12 off cycle, how else do you cause your plants to go to flower?
Well, I love to give my plants a bit of a phosphorus load right before Before I flip the light itself, the phosphorus really triggers the plants to realize, okay, something's going to happen, you know, let's get ready and gear up and start doing something else in our lives rather than just growing. So phosphorus is a big trigger to flip them into their next life stage. So I know a lot of growers may use like bottled synthetic phosphorus.
What sorts of phosphorus do you use? Well John, I actually love using those organic methods included in the teas and so really high phosphoric nutrient additives really depending on what that is if it's bone meal or I mean it really it kind of just depends on what I, what I have around at the time, I got… That's an honest answer, right? I mean that's how whatever goes into my soil mix is kind of what I got and I got a range of things I could have but I don't always have all these things I might have less. And that's what I use, I use the worm castings that I got this time and next time I'll get some different ones or whatever, you know.
Cool. Another thing I do use honestly that I usually do have on hand is I use a nice tea product I guess. Oh, so compost tea, yeah, something else I use also.
Yeah, I saw your 300 gallon compost tea brewer, it's kind of insane. I wish I could have showed you guys around the farm garden here more but I didn't have enough time today. Yeah, I know. Yeah, tell me about the compost tea and why is it an important ingredient or even essential ingredient to grow healthy plants like this and get through the bloom? Well, it really helps build that soil microbiome that we were talking about and the microbial life in there.
It just feeds it, it nurtures it and that's really what then gives us our final results of the quality bud production. What's below that you can't see is what you see above in your final final product and what you taste. So in those teas it's a huge variety of amendments and in that book it really goes through and explains the different elements and ingredients that go to make the different types of teas including if it's a flowering tea or a vegetative tea. Cool. So we've been talking a lot about using organic methods to have healthy plants but can somebody switch like mid-season, say they've grown chemical up to now and now they know they want to have healthier plants and they don't have problems.
problems in the future, can they just all of a sudden like switch to using organic methods? You know that's a really great question John and what I would say is yes you can switch. Your soil life is not going to be nearly as built up in the first place.
It's like kind of expecting a child you know to be a lot stronger than it would be if you raised it on fast food rather than real food. So, but you can switch depending on how much salts and synthetics have built up in there, but immediately you start doing teas of earthworm castings, top dressings. Top dressings are a huge, huge way to be able to immediately switch over from a synthetic based even a cocoa medium to start creating a real organic medium. Yeah, I mean I'd probably recommend like transitioning over. Don't just go cold turkey because the plants.
Are totally just not you said same thing like if you guys want to make dietary changes right? If you guys are starting to eat… trying to eat healthier and actually a really good movie came out lately, what is it, What About Health? Or no, What the Health?
On Netflix, so check that one out. But if you guys are trying to make dietary changes, don't just like go cold turkey into your new diet. You know, in my opinion that's definitely a way to fail. You want to slowly transition into that. So start eating healthier things a little bit at a time and get rid of the bad stuff.
And in this case I would say the bad stuff is the chemical fertilizers that kill the soil that don't create the microbial life, you know, that don't have beneficial, you beneficial nematodes and different beneficial bacteria that will eat literally the bad guys so you don't get problems in the beginning. Yay nematodes! So let's talk about, you know, you're not perfect, I'm not perfect, sometimes you may have an outbreak like I saw in your… your vegetative room, you got some powdery mildew, no no that was in your baby room, you got some powdery mildew, like what's up? Yeah, definitely, if you have any accident of any kind, including a fan going off or anything.
Or stopped running. Yep, absolutely, there was a small electrical issue in there and a breaker went off and the fan stopped working and so we had a bit of powdery mildew come on. And powdery mildew is a fungal spore, unfortunately, it lives everywhere in our environment, especially especially in Northern California, uh, being surrounded by the vineyards, we know all too well. So prevention is the key and, you know, airflow is a really big part of prevention.
And so when you get it like you got it, now what are you going to do? How are you going to treat it now using natural methods without spraying some nasty chemicals that are going to stay on and be in the plant? Yeah, that's a great question.
options to use. One I really enjoy is called Green Cure and it's basically related to baking soda but it doesn't need to be washed off so it's a great great OMRI certified organic prevention and also I like to spray that lacto that I ferment that really does a good job. That's an EM1?
Yes, absolutely. I'll put a link down below where I visited the place, EM1. So you guys could learn more about it.
Awesome stuff. Yeah, it's good stuff. So Mary Jane, another big question I have for you is let's talk about some of the products, because I know there's a lot of different products out there and everybody always wants a recommendation on this product or that product, but what products have you used to get actually flowers this beautiful?
Thank you. Well, to be honest with you, doing this commercially, I have to be very careful with what my financial output is for what the return is as well. So doing organic methods and inputs really is limited in a bottle base because it will expire very quickly and I'm not looking to spend all my money on expired nutrients in bottles basically. So I'm a big believer in brewing my own teas.
So compost tea. Absolutely, absolutely. Not just compost tea but… You know, you can find a variety of teas out there. So what other teas do you brew? You know, you can do high nitrogen teas simply from things collected around your own garden.
Fresh, fresh boiled so to speak, fresh brewed in your tea. Just your scraps that you can throw in there. I love to use biochar in my teas as well. Earthworm castings are a huge one.
I have a 180 gallon worm. I harvest and collect them to put… Your own? Yeah, absolutely.
Cool. You know, save as much as you can. That's really what the goal is, to be honest. Wow.
So, what you put in is what you get back out. So, it's even cheaper to grow organic than through nutrients. What is it like, maybe two, three times cheaper even?
Or more? I would say, honestly, when, depending on the scale of your garden and how much, room you have. I really get everything in as large of quantities as I can. Like we, I got a tote of biochar here, actually the superchar in fact. So bigger, the bigger, the better in my opinion.
And the bigger the volume, the better your deal you get. So when you go to the store at the grow shop and you get bottled nutrients off the shelf, 90% of what's in that bottle is water. I mean, you're paying for water for the most part.
So, I don't like to pay for water. I'd rather pay for rock dust. So one of the things that came up for us earlier is how much she feeds, so how much are you feeding right now during the bloom?
Well, actually that's a great question. I water almost every day, it depends on how much they're drinking, it depends on the weather, how hot it is outside, but to be honest, I'm feeding them about maybe twice a week. a week and what do you feed a feed includes a tea you know a lot of earthworm casting teas again yay nematodes um and so for my a lot of prevention as well i like to i like to do neem seed meal teas with earthworm castings um neem seed meal is a systemic preventative it's a natural insect growth regulator so it works on both insects and on molds systemically the plant takes it up through the roots And you don't have to just spray it on there because obviously you wouldn't spray neem on plants in flower like this at all.
So neem seed meal tea and earthworm castings together is an incredible cocktail that I like to make in my 50 pound bags. So you talked a lot about the compost teas and I want to know your opinion of this product here, the Boogie Brew. Compost tea because I know you use this actually in your garden right? Yeah absolutely.
I honestly feel that this is an excellent product and instead of lugging around the 50 pound bags that I do on a commercial level this is a home scale size and I'm not exactly sure but there's something over a dozen different things that go into these bags. He, John, I had the opportunity to speak to the owner of this company. And he truly, honestly cares about where all of the ingredients are sourced from.
So I can speak nothing but highly of this product and enjoy using it on a smaller scale definitely. And what benefits have you seen actually? Wow, night and day.
Really? Oh absolutely. Like what specific things?
I would say terpene production is a huge huge factor in using a tea like this. For anyone who doesn't brew teas or is not used to brewing a tea. That's going to be one of the first things you notice is the increase in terpene production, the smell.
So just things smell better and there's more… The pungency in the air is incredible. Is it more sticky? Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, I mean this is the same compost tea I use in my home garden for growing vegetables. It works really well. A lot of my viewers actually have reported that things grew a lot faster and they got higher yields, which is always really good. So that book that I mentioned earlier, True Living Organics by The Rev, his basics of his ingredients that go into his teas are essentially what are in. Boogie Brew tea.
But the owner of the company, John, really he sources his ingredients in a very, very particular way. He cares very much about where they come from. So it's just the same types of recipes but with extra care put into the sourced ingredients.
Absolutely. And if you guys want to know exactly what goes into this tea, you can check a link down below I put to this video where actually John open sources his compost tea recipe and tells you the approximate proportions. So that you could make up your own tea because he's so passionate about getting people away from chemicals and getting them back to nature and farming naturally. This is why he started a compost tea company because he couldn't afford his expensive bottled nutrients anymore. So he figured out how to do it a lot for less expensive and get some amazing results.
Like they're getting here and you're going to have less disease and healthier plants in the long run which is definitely really important. Through your own. So I want to ask you the final question because we're running out of time here.
What are some of the tips and things that you'd like to share with my viewers today before we have to sign off? You know, honestly, John, what I'd like to say truly is that prevention is key. Prevention is truly key in anything you do.
So with that said, build your soil. Really work on the biome of it. You know fish is a great great product to help with that any sort of Natural sugar substance or carbohydrate. That's a great feed for the microbial life Keep on top of your mold with great airflow.
That's super important. Keep defoliation at the top of your game and just don't get lazy. You know, with that said, we're all human.
And so a lot of these products that we've been talking about, the teas, the frass, these products really help with prevention and allowing us to be human and allowing us the space to maybe slack a day or you know have a nice trip with your girlfriend something like that so I really truly say that prevention is key in using these types of products in building your soil life and keeping air flow and checking your plants on a regular basis every single day. Go out there and look at them, they're your children, they're alive, you know, they each have their own individual souls and make sure they're happy and healthy. And so when you pay attention to them, everything else is gravy.
Wow, yeah, I mean that's the same exact thing I do in my garden. So whether you're growing cannabis or vegetables or herbs or whatever, pay attention to your plants. Spend time with them, see what's going on, feed them well from the time they're a child, literally.
I mean, like us, right? We need to eat good healthy food and if we're not eating good healthy food we're going to not be as healthy, we're going to be overweight and have a lot of problems and sickness and disease later in life. I mean, that's the most important time to ensure that adults will be healthy is when they're kids and feeding them right.
I mean, that's why I watch my diet now because it is so important. You are what you eat. Your plants are what you eat.
what they absorb, right, and what they eat too, literally. Absolutely. Yeah, so excellent tips and I'd encourage you guys to do all those.
So the last thing I'd like to say today is actually I've gone out and spoke with John, the owner of the BoogieBoo company, and he wants to offer you guys, my viewers, a special deal so you guys could get some of the very products. that Mary Jane uses here in her farm to have some amazing growth and amazing beautifully plants. So, what you're going to do is you're going to order online at boogiebrew.net slash GYG to get these special prices for you guys that I've negotiated, you're not going And prices lower anywhere else on this combination. And what they're going to do is they're going to send you a priority male flat rate box with several different items in it. And they have a couple different sizes, so if you're a small grower, home gardener, hey he's got a size for you.
And if you're a big grower and need lots of stuff, he could also accommodate you. Anyways, in that box it's going to have a few things. Number one.
The Boogie Brew Compost Tea, so you want to say a few words about this real quick? Yeah, this product is full of all the different individual ingredients that go into the homemade compost teas. So there's earthworm castings, there's rock dust, there's biochar, there's kelp meal, there's pure protein, there's all the amazing different ingredients that are sourced. It's an incredible powerhouse.
working on the plants. Yeah, I like it all because it's in one place. I don't have to go out and buy all these individual ingredients and do mixing in my kitchen. I can just already pre-buy the best stuff that I'm aware of. So the next product that's going to come in that flat rate box is this right here.
And this is for all you guys that have plans to go into bloom. And it's the Earth Juice Bloom Rainbow Mix Pro. So what's this good for?
You know, this is really good for that pre-phosphorus hit that I talked about. It's 240. 14, too, so I would give this to my plants to really remind them and trigger them, hey, we're about to start blooming, and then add on the potassium a little bit later in a few weeks after they started to bud. So this is like the first stage to make it happen, Captain. So the next product in that box is this right here, and this is actually a new product to me actually.
It's called the Prima Hydrolisate, and it's a 5-12-14. This is CDFA, so it's organic certified. And so what would this product be good for?
You know, this is really good. This is a fish-based product, and so this is maintenance. This is feeding that microbial life in the soil, truly, with the amino acids in there as well. It just, this is a powerhouse. This is really, really great.
This is what I use to cheat in my garden, you know, especially if your soil is deficient, if you've had soil that's not so good, like I use bagged soil from Home Depot, right? About after the second, third year, my growth really went down bad and I did a soil check and it was low in nitrogen. So actually I used the fish version, the high nitrogen version of this, but this is a little bit different version. But anyways, this will feed your plants the amino acid form. amino acids which basically feed the microbes and your plants and it's easily absorbed in your plants.
So the last product that's going to come in that box ready for you guys to make it to and survive and thrive in bloom and even before that is this guy. This is the boogie frass or insect frass. Now why is this important to use? Do you use it yourself?
Yeah, I love insect frass. It's the best organic input to keep those bugs away. To be honest, aside from using that neem like I mentioned earlier, insect frass is absolutely imperative to keeping those bugs away. Awesome, yeah, that's what I use it for too and, you know, adding it into your compost teas when you're near the end is what I like to do.
Also I like to incorporate this into the soil and just make a frass tea out of it. And then feed that to my plants as well. That's the best. Yeah, absolutely.
So if you guys want to get hooked up on the special deal of all these products you guys just saw, be sure to check the link down below. I'll put it as the first comment. It's boogiebrew.net slash GYG. So this is specifically for a bloom box.
Of course, you could check the GYG page. Also, on the link for other specials that I've negotiated with John, the owner of the BoogieBoo company, including hose end or water filters, they get the chlorine out because that hurts the microbiome, including other products like my favorite rock dust products. If you guys can't find that locally, he's got a really good horticulture grade rock dust you guys could buy as a package deal. I've negotiated really good prices for you guys. If I remember, I'll put a couple links down below to videos that I've done.
with John in the past. They're really quite fun and informative at the same time. You'll have to watch to learn more.
But one of the ones that come off the top of my head is compost tea versus rock dust, you know, which is better? Well, you'll have to watch the video down below to learn about it. It's actually, yeah, it's really a funny episode.
I still think rock dust, man, it came before microbes. The earth is a big rock. Anyways, that's enough for this episode.
I've really had fun today, so thanks for having me out today to your farm here. Thank you so much. Mary Jane and show everybody it. I wish I could show you guys more of it.
So if you guys want me to come back, show you guys more of the farm, I mean I want to make a good solid half hour, hour video here showing everything she does, all the different areas where she grows food. Who grows the cannabis and how specifically she does it. The's totally a wealth of knowledge.
I mean I hung out here for like five hours and I got to make this little small video because I've learned so many new things that I could apply, you know, because I don't grow cannabis but in my vegetable garden because whether you're growing cannabis. or other vegetables, you know, they're all pretty much growing the same thing. Absolutely. So yeah, thumbs it up, get a lot, a thousand, I'll come back for sure. Also be sure to click that subscribe button right down below so you don't miss out on any of my new and upcoming episodes.
I've coming out, I better be three to four days, you never know where I'll show up or what you'll be learning on my YouTube channel. And also be sure to check my past episodes. My past episodes are a wealth of knowledge, over 1300 episodes now at this time, teaching you guys all aspects on how you guys can grow your own food or even cannabis at home.
Because once again, the same techniques apply no matter what you're growing. And also be sure to share this video with somebody else that maybe is currently growing cannabis now, maybe using chemicals and how they could switch over to organics. And even have better and more successful bloom and flowers and more importantly creating those big gigantic beautiful buds. So with that my name is John Kohler with growingyourgreens.com. We'll see you next time.
Until then, remember, keep on growing. Bye!