A list of tools too good not to share…. Horticulture Resources
-
CreatorDiscussion
-

lab_gradeParticipantMay 9, 2025 at 9:00 amI was recently listening to the UF IFAS Extension channel’s talk on water quality, and they mentioned a website I have not heard of before that is too good not to share: cleanwater3.org
This website, produced through a collaboration by some of the best Ag/Horticultural universities in the country, provides guidance and tools for everything from water quality, how to prevent and control waterborne pathogens and even guidance on how to sanitize equipment (concentration, exposure times, etc.)
I cannot emphasize enough how incredible a resource this is,
The pathogen diagnosing tool alone is worth it’s weight in gold
https://occviz.com/CW3/pathogen/pathogen.html@scottyreal @grambo @dude Get that horticulture knowledge out there!
Signed,
A former university horticulture nerd
-
This discussion was modified 7 months, 1 week ago by
lab_grade.
0 -
This discussion was modified 7 months, 1 week ago by
-
CreatorDiscussion
-
Here’s the talk on Water Quality: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkSiSmDwIqw&list=PLY1FenIJO3HkT52AQxgokLTlzJvIqvrjg&index=3
0 -
J-Mystro is a Tool.
Cannabis Nutrition Guide
https://dudegrows.com/mystros-cannabis-nutrition-guide/
0 -
0
-
Dankness; is the ecophylotaxonomicaly historical scientific officialdom of the paradymes… worth learning about.
” I<b style=”background-color: transparent; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; color: var( –e-global-color-text );”>ntroduction
Cannabis sativa L. (Cannabaceae) is an annual flowering herb that has been domesticated multiple times independently in Central Eurasia [1] over its 26,000 year association with humans, providing agronomic value as a source of food, fiber and medicine [2] [3]. Cannabis is typically a dioecious plant [4] with female inflorescences being the site of concentrated production of secondary metabolites in particular cannabinoids and terpenes. There are several outstanding questions in the field of Cannabis taxonomy, with publications supporting different regions of origin, with ethnographic data favoring a Central Eurasian origin [3] and fossil pollen dating favoring the Northeastern Tibetan Plateau origin [5]. Additionally, a variable number of species have been described (C. indica, C. sativa, C. ruderalis) [6] [1] [3], with no widely accepted consensus in the relationships of ecotypes of Cannabis. Further, unhybridized landraces, defined as locally adapted distinctive populations which have undergone long periods of selection [7] have become difficult to obtain and identify [8]. Wild and feral populations of Cannabis which have not been influenced by hybridization have become increasingly rare [8] and it has been suggested that unaltered wild populations may no longer exist [6]. Human cultivation coupled with climate fluctuations and habitat fragmentation have likely impacted current phenotypes and may have increased isolation among wild/feral Cannabis populations and domesticated cultivars [3] [9]. Today, Cannabis is broadly divided into fiber-type, grain-type and drug-type cultivars [3]. “
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.07.09.499013v1.full
-
This reply was modified 6 days, 4 hours ago by
BuddyBranch.
0 -
This reply was modified 6 days, 4 hours ago by
Log in to reply.
