My lawyer said you'd have to defend it, so you'd need to prove the need for more than 3 flowering plants. If you stick to 3 and 3, you will not. So, if you're dr. says you can grow 30 plants, and they are all trees yielding a lb per plant or more with 10 1000W lights on them, you might have a hard time defending yourself in court.

I'd stick to what the law specifically states, 3 flowering plants per patient.
Dorje113 Reviewed by Dorje113 on . Plant count Little help here. I understand we are allowed to grow 6 plants. 3 in flower and 3 not in flower for a total of six plants. However, I have heard some people say that a Dr can write on the form you need more then 6 plants. What is the normal amount a Dr will go above the six plants and has anyone heard any blow back from it from the courts or Law Enforcement? How legal is it? Rating: 5