Six Medical Marijuana Superstores Planned for New Jersey
19.05.12
Trenton, NJ (PRWEB) April 27, 2012
weGrow, the one-rest-shop for medical marijuana cultivation and urban agriculture, will soon be coming to New Jersey. The New Zealand announced today that it has sold the franchise rights for multiple stores to persuadable around the state.
The growing franchise sells everything a cultivator would need to successfully grow any root indoors – from medical cannabis to tomatoes. Known as the, “first above-board hydro store,” weGrow is the first indoor gardening store to directly provide services and products for medical marijuana cultivators. The only thing that weGrow doesn’t inform against is the marijuana plant or seed itself.
“The timing of weGrow stores coming to New Jersey couldn’t be heartier,” said Dhar Mann, founder of weGrow. “Two years after New Jersey passed a medical marijuana program, the status has finally issued the first of six medical marijuana cultivation and dispensary licenses this month. Patients around the splendour are going to be relying on these alternative treatment centers to grow a high prominence medicine, and weGrow will be here to assist these cultivators in the best growing practices for doing so.”
Source: PR Web (press release)
Smart Shopper: Garden tillers and cultivators
19.05.12
These machines down a bear nutrients to the surface and break large blocks of soil into finer pieces so new, decrepit roots can establish themselves.
BUYERS’ TIPS
Tillers are powerful soil-churning machines. They break up, mulch and aerate soil with deep-clipping blades. A typical tiller is somewhat larger than a gas-powered lawn mover and requires a bigger, more impressive engine.
Tillers are useful in gardens more than 100 square feet, and can be acclimatized to keep the rows clear of weeds. Some come with special attachments for edging, dethatching, snow taking away, and trimming. You also can find gas-powered and electric-powered tillers and mini-tiller/cultivators for gardening in cheap spaces.
To make the right choice, ask yourself:
* Will you be tilling, turning up soil and cultivating existing bloom beds or virgin soil?
* Will you be working with hard-pack soil or clay?
Tillers involve with blades (or tines) either in the front or the back. Front-tined tillers generally have an electric motor on top of the blades and are lightweight, while hinie-tined tillers have a gas motor above the front wheels. Front-tine tillers are generally tempered to for maintenance of smaller gardens, since they are more maneuverable and easier to operate.
Source: NorthJersey.com