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2017 Cannabis Cultivation Conference

June 3, 2017 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

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I attended the inaugural Cannabis Cultivation Conference at the Oakland Marriott City Center in Oakland, California this past March and was very impressed with the professional business-to-business atmosphere. Valuable education and advice was offered by keynote and panel speakers, as well as over 50 product and service exhibitors. Networking opportunities abounded and hundreds of experienced individuals, as well as eager newbie registrants, exchanged ideas and made connections during program breaks, lunch and social time.

Participants traveled from all across the country and world to Oakland, California for the event – with an especially strong contingent from the western cannabis-friendly U.S. states of Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Alaska and California. All the expected topics were well covered, from best growing practices to licensing procedures – and even the fundamentals of futures markets, in anticipation of cannabis eventually being treated like any other agricultural commodity. Three days of intensive learning! I tried to take it all in. Here’s a brief breakdown of a few highlights.

The very first session dove right into the emerging challenges and opportunities presented by the evolving laws and processes in newly legal states. Here in California, for instance, the aftermath of Prop 64 is leading to a flurry of rule-making and a nearly impenetrable minefield of punishing fines for failing to have your ducks in a row. There will be more than a dozen classes of Medical Cannabis Cultivation Licenses, with annual fees ranging from $560 for a nursery to $38,350 for a medium indoor grow. But local permits must first be obtained and many cities/counties are still debating what to allow. Not surprisingly, a paperwork relief industry is springing up around the application process as lawyers and consultants chart winning paths through the regulatory straight-jackets as fast as bureaucrats can erect more daunting barriers to entry.

Étienne Fontán, Co-owner and Vice President of the Berkeley Patients Group, kicked off day two with an entertaining and heartwarming keynote speech tracing his personal journey through life as an activist and entrepreneur. A follow-on panel before lunch addressed several serious business issues affecting the state of the cannabis market, including the Obama era Yates memo on banking, FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) money laundering rules, and Internal Revenue Code section 280E which has been interpreted to prevent cannabis enterprises from deducting business expenses on tax returns.

Lunch breaks were held in the Exhibit Hall, so besides schmoozing and boozing between snacks, there was plenty of non-stop product info to ingest. One booth in particular that caught my attention was the big aquarium display tank brought by Oxygen Research Group LLC . Experienced cannabis cultivators know the value of delivering oxygen to the roots of plants and have long employed aquarium air-stones and noisy pumps to bubble or aerate water. The O2Grow uses hydrolytic electrolysis to silently break apart water molecules (H20) and create a mesmerizing underwater fog of hydrogen plus super-saturating oxygen nano-bubbles. Science geeks will correctly guess that much of the output recombines into water, and stray hydrogen simply dissipates at the surface. What’s interesting is that so much of the oxygen dissolves into the water since the bubbles are too small to break surface tension. University research found a 21% yield increase when this ultra-oxygenating tech was applied to organic brandywine tomato culture – impressive results!

A panel discussion later that day was devoted to increasing yields. Many techniques were reviewed that you’ve likely already heard about or employed, such as high stress training/super-cropping, automated fertigation, and soil salinity monitoring. Did you know that compounding your own bulk batches of fertilizer from cheap 50 pound bags of base salts can save you 90% over commercial off-the-shelf pre-mixes? I was also impressed with a simple suggestion for optimizing square footage, reducing wasted floor space by virtually eliminating aisles with wheeled benches – kinda like those puzzles we played with as kids where you pushed squares around in a plastic frame to form a pattern by manipulating the one empty space. While writing this article I chanced upon a short video demonstrating this idea on YouTube.

Facility automation was the next hot topic on the track I pursued. Scott Reach, founder of Rare Dankness, blew the crowd away with his investments in futuristic farming technology. Water recycling is a key to being green. Elimination of unskilled labor keeps costs down. What gets automated? Almost everything – and I’m not just talking trimming bud, think germination and up-potting, machine vision based IPM, data collection and climate control.

I found a podcast called Blazin’ with Bobby Black featuring an informative interview with Mr. Reach describing his career history that I thought was interesting. Scott feels legalization & competition drives down prices dramatically; to that end he is administering the financial discipline of big agriculture, working toward a $200/lb cost of production for 8 million grams/year via greenhouse automation, from his current $900/lb .

Any advice and opinions about the cultivation of Cannabis offered by Bruce N. Goren are his own and do not represent the University of California or the Master Gardener Program.


2017 Cannabis Cultivation Conference
Source: Marijuana Times

Filed Under: cannabis cultivation, cannabis event, conference, Cultivation, Culture, Featured

Accelerating Your Growth

June 2, 2017 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

accelerating-your-growth-AGS

Anyone who has ever grown cannabis indoors knows how difficult it can be. If you’re not lucky enough to be able to grow huge plants in a greenhouse or outdoors in a place with great climate for most of the year – like northern California – then you’ve likely dealt with the myriad of issues that arise when you take something meant to be done easily outdoors and bring it inside.

There are many reasons to grow cannabis indoors, climate and security being chief among them. Indoor growing means year-round growing and plants grown inside a secure building are so much easier to keep away from potential thieves.

Fortunately, technological advancements in cultivation are making it easier to grow large amounts of plants indoors in ways that are cost-effective but that do not sacrifice quality. And helping growers build cost-efficient spaces for growing is exactly why companies like Accelerated Growth Solutions exist. According to their website, AGS “provides the best climate control equipment in the cannabis industry.  We not only offer the most efficient systems, but unrivaled precision in environmental control based on temperature, humidity, and vapor pressure differential.”

AGS systems can automate every aspect of the climate plants exist and thrive in. They have water-cooled systems that are up to 50% more efficient than air-cooled systems, as well as pre-fabricated “Central Utility Plants” which are a “a controlled, single source environment” that AGS can provide “in a matter of months rather than the years it may take to engineer and construct a field built system integrated into the building.”

The environment your cannabis is grown in is critically important to the success of your crop. Stability is key, and systems from AGS provide that stability. They provide not only the products, but also the know-how and can guide you step-by-step through the process of growing top quality cannabis in an indoor environment.


Accelerating Your Growth
Source: Marijuana Times

Filed Under: cannabis cultivation, Cultivation, Culture, Featured, growing cannabis, Sponsored

Fortune Mag’s 7 Most Powerful People in Marijuana Industry

June 1, 2017 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

This article published on April 20, 2016. Just a few of the most powerful people in the pot industry:

  • Ricardo Baca, Journalist and Editor-In-Chief at The Cannabist (The Denver Post)
  • Justin Gover is the CEO of GW Pharmaceuticals
  • Steve Deangelo, president and co-founder of The ArcView Group
  • Troy Dayton, co-founder of The ArcView Group, former board member of the Marijuana Policy Project and the National Cannabis Industry Association
  • Lori Ajax, the State of California’s first-ever chief of the Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation
  • Keith Stroup, the attorney who founded the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML)
  • Snoop Dogg, rapper, investor and director of the venture capital fund Casa Verde Capital

See the entire article here: http://fortune.com/2016/04/20/marijuana-industry-powerful-420/?iid=sr-link1

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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