The only organics grow guide is also the only book that shows how to change an existing grow room to an all-natural, synthetic-free, living, breathing cannabis cultivation space. Written in the accessible, easy-to-follow style that’s won The Rev so many followers, this book sifts through the jargon surrounding organic marijuana growing and gets straight to the heart of the the living soil. True Living Organics provides several different ways to create a high-quality living medium for marijuana plants. Dispensing with the basics of how to grow pot, this guide instead gives the reader a new education on what cannabis plants really need and the best way to give it to them. With over 200 color photos illustrating every topic, this book is as easy to use as it is insightful.
This book is awesome! Well-written (especially by grow book standards, sadly many are not so good), information-dense, and the Rev's style is unique and highly innovative - organic growing in 1 and 2 gallon containers, which he mentions developing due to a disability that makes lugging huge things of wet soil impractical. The only downside I see is that it's VERY complicated and particular, requiring a lot of ingredients (ie blood meal, guano, manure, greensand, feather meal, etc etc etc) to get started, not to mention an RO filter for water. But once you do get everything you need, you'll buy almost no bottled nutrients every again, and I imagine you wouldn't strictly need any. It's fascinating and inspiring stuff for any grower.
Awesome book, cheers! Thanks to Mr. GrowIt for the recommendation :) True Living Organics is a fantastic read for all those looking to grow plants organically, especially their own medicine
This is an okay attempt at teaching about organics. Personally I find better resources in Albrecht books as well as the Cannabis Grow Bible, and the Build A Soil YouTube series.
This book would have been much better had it not tried to connect with readers using what I am assuming was the authors speaking style and mannerisms and transferred them to book. It was often distracting and became annoying by the end.