Guerrilla Growing
245 topics in this forum
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- 420 Crew
- 21 replies
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wallabies are eating the tops of my plants and the surrounding fan leaves. ive tried 'marking out my territory' etc.. but these animals don't seem to understand just wondering where i could pick a role of barbed wire up from? ill try any other methods that will maim/kill them, this is just pissing me off now
Last reply by Black_one, -
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Looking to grow in the scrub this year and i was just wondering what is the best way to do it. Thinking of spreading the plants out so that if 1 gets found the others may not. Problem is how do i keep the kangaroos and rabbits away. Was told blood and bone will deter the rabbits but what i guess i am really asking is there any other way of stopping them besides putting chicken wire around them. Wouldnt the plants stand out more to people walking through the scrub with wire around them? Any help would be great. Cheers
Last reply by WhiteSkunk, -
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i woke this morning to hear from a neighbour that a visitor he had seen my plants and was making comments like "theres about four plants there, they shouldve been picked two weeks ago" comments of this idiotic calibur do tend to worry me a fair bit, especially when this persons son is the local copper, and i don't know if you've heard but in nsw recently bob carr is all over crops and drugs etc and theres been heaps of busts lately so i would imagine a young hot headed copper would love to nail down a local crop... or he could be a decent bloke.. theres only two plants but they are quite large and getting a fair bit smelly getting their buds together and still have 2…
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if i were to start growing outdoors in my backyard, would i have a high risk of being caught?
Last reply by Tom, -
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Did you skinny-dip or sunbathe topless beside your pool this summer? Chances are, your carefree frolics were caught by a camera in the sky. The particular sentence that caught my attention was: "A by-product of locating land is the ability to precisely locate people," he said. "For example, aerial photography can identify which weeds are growing on a particular farmer's property". Rest of the article here: Voyeur-sats raise privacy concerns.
