Quote Originally Posted by loststix
the main problem ya might have is the long daylight hours.
what we have here is by the time daylight has gone under 13 hours a day
we have strong winds and cold nights plants dont always make it
unless ya can go out every day cover and uncover them so they have 12/12
thats why most ppl in ireland use autoflowering
another one is have them in pots then move them to shaded area that they get high sun but not early morning and late evening
works for some strains
cause them to flower
hollands hope/hoop and early girl
ya could always go for a couple of low strains lowberry, lowskunk, blue barrel 47 and so on
best of luck i cant find the link but i do remeber seeing on here or some where of drying, cureing and storing all outside never have to bring it into ur own home

cant beat a bit of ur own green :jointsmile:
Yo man thanks for chiming in and giving me a hand. We have high light schedules, the most we get is 20 hours in July I think, and even then, the 4 hours isnt completely black. I will not be able to go out and cover/uncover them to flower, I was intending on letting them go until end of october, but frost will have definatly set in 1/2 through october. You suggest Hollands hope, and early girl for such conditions? I might buy a pack of lowryder auto's just to give em a go, and if they work well then I guess Ill do 100 of them lol. You're right homegrowen is the best.

Quote Originally Posted by sunbiz1
You do some very nice indoor work!, but your challenge won't be from animals up there in the wilderness of Northern Canada. More likely your short growing season and soil conditions will be a bigger obstacle.

I wouldn't worry too much about anyone finding your locations in the middle nowhere(lol!), nobody will unless you create a path AND someone gets extremely lucky.

I made multiple trips to extend a harvest here in the lower 48, twice daily at sunset and right after sunrise after covering plants last Fall during frost/freeze. Not recommended, but I'm sort of the risk taking type.
Thanks sunbiz. I intend on bringing in my own premixed soil to the site, after I dig out 2 feet where I intend to lay them and see if theres more soil down there, If there is, I will let them grow into it, if not Im diggin 5 5foot holes lol.

Yea Im pretty sure no one will find my crop as I am in the middle of nowhere. (Knocks on wood). Last year I remember our greens being frosted in late september, we get frost in august if we're having a bad summer.

So will the frost 100% kill my hashberry cross? She has purple genetics in her so I think she'd be able to deal with a tempature fluxuation, just not sure how the plant its self reacts to frost because Ive never done outdoor.

Thanks guys, appreciate you giving me all the info I need! :jointsmile: :hippy: