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REV’S TIP<br />
Don’t go <strong>to</strong>o cheap with your choice of bagged soil mix or this could<br />
cause you problems down the road. In TLO growing we recycle our soil;<br />
you don’t have <strong>to</strong>, but I’ll show you how. Also, avoid soil mixes with a lot of peat moss in them.<br />
<strong>The</strong> peat moss, when recycled, tends <strong>to</strong> cause the soil mix pH <strong>to</strong> dive through the floor, and<br />
extreme corrective measures need <strong>to</strong> be taken. Finally, avoid using clear plastic cups. Both the<br />
plant roots and the microlife prefer the dark, so any light on the roots is detrimental.<br />
Imported Clones and TLO<br />
Think REAL hard about doing this, my green friends. I highly recommend that you start your plants<br />
from seeds, then make your own clones <strong>to</strong> use from then on. Bringing in clones from friends or clubs,<br />
in my experience, almost always results in some kind of nasty ass parasitic hitchhiker, like powdery<br />
mildew, spider mites, root aphids, or thrips, not <strong>to</strong> mention any killer viruses or pathogenic microbial<br />
life that may be on board. Get some decent seeds; find me at Kingdom Organic Seeds (KOS) and I<br />
will fix you up with some born and bred TLO beauties. I recommend not going with feminized seeds<br />
if you plan on doing any breeding with them, but apart from that, it’s your call. Just use some good<br />
genetics and your garden will be so very much more productive and happy than if you’re using<br />
inferior S1 (selfed), bottlenecked or otherwise messed-up genetics. Come on over <strong>to</strong> the forums<br />
online at Skunk Magazine because that place is full of great people and as far as I know, great<br />
genetics.<br />
A very happy all organic TLO clone in full growing force