Outdoor First woods guerilla grow

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Started these 2 in the woods last week. This is my first guerilla grow. They're clones roughly 35 days old. Wowzers is the bigger one and white runtz is the other.
This spot isn't easy to get to. You have to go down a steep ravine, over a couple rather large fallen trees, through poison ivy and thorns. There's no path to them and in a spot that's just inconvenient as hell to get to.
I'd say they get about 8 hours of direct light a day.

Each hole was dug about 3 feet deep and 2 feet wide. There's 3 bags of FFOF and 1 bag of happy frog between the 2. Great white and amino acids mixed in as well as water polymer crystals towards the bottom. There's a creek within 50 yards which is still a pain to get to. I've been using a 5 and 10 gallon dry bag to haul the water when needed. Thankfully I'm not a small guy and hike quite a lot as is.
I've taken plenty of dog and human urine and put it around it. My friend got a puppy and I took the mop water lol also some of his poop. She just uses water with the mop then sprays it and wipes it, so no soap or cleaners in it. Dried blood, ground pepper, garlic and clove has been sprinkled around it and neem oil sprayed on it as well as around. I've taken some megacrop 1 part with me and sprinkled it around the random ways I take to get to it game trails or anything similar.
Going to give them some mammoth p this week and some more training.
Fingers crossed I get a good haul. Hoping for a half # a plant, but as I known, a guerilla grow can go south quick.
Any tips would be nice, this is in the Midwest in North west Indiana
 

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Update.
All is well, plants are vigorous with no pests or deer issues. They grow more then a few inches every time I visit. The wowzers is officially a bush now IMO. She's a better grower overall and gets a bit more light.
I'm prepping another site for a 10 week old barneys farm blueberry cheese that's close by and even harder to get to. The soil was a huge pain in the ass getting it there. I need 1 more bag and a small pick axe as the native soil is very hard and dry. This is a South facing spot so she will get all day sun.
 

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Planted my barneys farm blueberry cheese. About 11 weeks old from seed. It was in a 5 gallon fabric pot of 70/30 coco and perlite
Timed it well as it was starting to rain just as I finished up. This spot it will have sun all day minus maybe 2 hours. Cut penty of vegetation around it to help get more light, then used everything I cut down to make a natural barrier/blind.
I used 3 bags of ocean forrest and 1.5 bags of happy frog. Total of roughly 56 gallons. That's a big hole and was a pain getting everything there. I mixed in amino acids, great white and water polymer crystals. The soil was extremely hard and dry so I want to he sire it has water it needs. Slightly worried about it drying due to it being in coco. I buried it close to the 1st branch and used some of the clay rich native soil to cover the top layer of soil to retain moisture.
I've never transplanted that big of a root ball from coco to soil so this will be a learning curve. Fingers crossed.
 

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These girls are blowing up. Noticeable growth every visit. Too bad they dont get a full sun all day.
I'm holding a 4 ft pole by the plant for width and height reference. Been spraying every week with neem oil for pest and PM prevention. Only watered 2 times,l.
 

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By mid July the wowzers will he over my head. I'm going to have my work cut out for me supporting the branches and drying this monstrosity.
I stop and spray them with neem oil as a fungi prevention every week. They just keep getting exponentially bigger.
 

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Over my head now. The recent rain has been coming in every few days and has done wonders.
Time to feed these girls as they're def showing they're hungry.
Still spraying with neem oil every week, I feel I should switch it up so nothing can build a resistance. A buddy of mine swears by baking soda spray.
 

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Gave these girls a good feed and some much needed hair cuts. Found some bastard mealy bugs, so this week I will practice genocide. I'm thinking a neem oil spray with some alcohol and diatomaceous earth on the bases and on leaves. I've delt with these before on my peppers. They have a waxy exoskeleton so if dealing with them a little alcohol helps dissolve that coat. A little soap can help to suffocate them as well.
Growth is still phenomenal and consistent rain.
 

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Quick vid
Excellent work man... If my country had the right climate there would be plants everywhere.. I love these type of grows.
I'm forced to grow mine in in a box buried in the dirt 6 foot below the ground with access via a secret hatch
 
Excellent work man... If my country had the right climate there would be plants everywhere.. I love these type of grows.
I'm forced to grow mine in in a box buried in the dirt 6 foot below the ground with access via a secret hatch
Seriously? That's insane. I do indoor too but this is much more satisfying to me.... and physically it's hard af.
 
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