Marijuana Legalization | Medical Marijuana

legal bud

 

 
 

Marijuana Legalization

Welcome to Marijuana-Legalization.net. This site is dedicated to the issue of marijuana legalization. Should it be legal? This site serves as a valuable resource for those interested in marijuana laws and whether or not marijuana should be legal as well as marijuana pics and marijuana videos. Some of the things to consider are what are the marijuana effects on our bodies and marijuana addiction, American citizens right to smoke a harmless plant in the comfort of their own home, the amount of revenue the legalization would generate for the government and many small businesses, and since marijuana typically calms a person perhaps America would become a less violent place to live. There are many more issues to consider - these are just a few. Marijuana-Legalization.net aims to cover all issues. If something isn't covered here - please drop us a line and we'll be happy to add it.

Marijuana legalization could be an answer to our economic problems. One of the many, but one nonetheless. In fact, California introduced legislation that would legalize pot and sales to be regulated and taxed. That would provide billions of dollars for the troubled state of California. Amazingly marijuana (marihuana, marajuana - for those who have difficutly spelling :) ) is California's BIGGEST CASH CROP generating $14 billion a year in sales - second to agriculture. It is estimated that legalizing marijuana would bring the state about $1.3 billion per year in revenue. Legal pot growers could positively affect the entire state of California. If growing marijuana were legal across the country, image the rewards. Pot farms thriving, people pleasantly smoking their bongs and the government spending the money. Learn more about marijuana laws.

Sinsemilla Growing of Marijuana

February 06, 2007 by Agaric
Marijuana is a curious plant when it is domesticated. Like certain other plants such as strawberries or apple trees, the cannabis sativa plant can be propagated by cutting a section from one plant and transplanting that cutting to grow on its own. Marijuana growing without seeds is known as sinsemilla, and it has become a world-renowned method for producing the most potent and unique marijuana strains on the market.

Cannabis growth for human recreational use depends on one underlying principle. Female plants are used due to the presence of THC-rich buds in between the leaves. These buds contain hundreds of tiny hairs that are designed to catch pollen from male plants. However, if male plants are removed from the growing environment, the little hairs do not catch the pollen. As a result, the female plant devotes more of its energy to producing larger buds with larger hairs that can be more effective at catching the male pollen (even though it's not present). This process of starving the female plant of the male reproductive component allows for optimum growth of THC-rich buds. If male plants are present, then they have the potential to fertilize the female plants. If this occurs, the female plant devotes less energy to creating larger buds and more toward producing seeds to create cannabis offspring.

One advantage of the sinsemilla growing technique is that growers automatically know if the clone plant will be male or female. When growing marijuana, growers generally discard male plants because they do not contain the THC-rich buds that account for the majority of marijuana consumption worldwide. Thus, when growing with seeds, the grower runs a 50% chance of getting male plants mixed in with female plants in the crop. If one has limited growing space in a world which has criminalized marijuana, the space that is available must be used to the fullest and most advantageous extent. Unfortunately, one does not know a plant is male or female until advanced stages in the growth phase when either buds or pollen glands start to emerge from between the cannabis leaves. In other words, much time and energy could be wasted attempting to grow female plants from seeds if the probability of the plant being male is 50/50. Therefore, sinsemilla provides a much more sure way of propagating and growing female cannabis plants.

 

Actually, cuttings can be used to determine if a cannabis plant is male or female. A cutting taken from a plant of indeterminate sex can be subjected to a certain light regimen, after which it will flower and determine the sex of the clone parent. However, if you are using cuttings to determine the sex of the plant, then you are perfectly capable of growing with the sinsemilla technique which depends on cuttings to work. Seeds can be completely eliminated with the exception of an initial crop that is started using seeds rather than cuttings.

Only unpollinated female plants can be used in the sinsemilla growing process. To accomplish this, male plants must be removed early in the growing phase of a crop to remove the risk of pollen reaching the female plant buds. Before a female plant flowers, a cutting can be taken to begin what is known as a clone bank. These clones will be genetically identical to the parent plant, which ensures that a viable strain of marijuana can be duplicated with little variation over subsequent growings. Furthermore, the clone plants will ripen at the same time which can help growers better plan their crop rotations and harvests. Finally, since cuttings have already attained a degree of growth when they are transplanted, the sinsemilla marijuana plant takes less time to ripen than one grown from a seed. All of these factors are particularly important in regions that have decriminalized marijuana, particularly the coffee house region of Amsterdam. These shops pride themselves on certain strains and varieties that can only be duplicated through the sinsemilla method of growth.

Marijuana once again demonstrates its versatility for human growth and consumption. Imagine the thriving and diverse market that could be created if marijuana was decriminalized in the United States and its cultivation put back into the hands of the farmer or gardener.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/137051/sinsemilla_growing_of_marijuana.html?singlepage=true&cat=32