Steps to harvesting medical marijuana

A brief explanation of the 60- to 67-day growing process:

Thousands of legal medical marijuana plants are growing under lights in a warehouse in Albion, a small southeastern Illinois city whose residents are more familiar with corn and soybeans. Ataraxia, which runs the facility, was the state’s first cultivation company allowed to start growing plants. It has started harvesting and will be the first to deliver to licensed dispensaries throughout the state by mid-October.

Here’s a brief explanation of the 60- to 67-day growing process:

‘IMMACULATE CONCEPTION’

The life cycle starts in the “mother room,” where about 20 strains of lush, green marijuana plants thrive. By taking cuttings from these plants to start new ones the cycle starts again. Growers tend to never reveal where the mothers originate — “immaculate conception”. While 23 states allow medical use of marijuana, there’s a federal prohibition against transporting it across state lines. Growers obtain mother plants either from the black market or from legal operations in other states. Regulators turn a blind eye.

0000019749-bbmclonevseedCLONE ROOM

Cuttings are taken to the “clone room” where they take root and get light 24 hours a day. Cuttings take root in seven to 21 days. Each plant has a bar code that identifies its strain and when it began life as a clone.

A LIFE OF LIGHTS

276337-abdd2b4b1542d51d018bb94d311afc62After the plants take root, they are potted and moved into the “veg room,” short for vegetative state. They’ll spend about two months under lights for 18 hours a day. Like other plants, marijuana is vulnerable to pests like spider mites, springtails and aphids. Good air circulation and super-clean conditions minimize the risk, and workers are sprayed with disinfectant to prevent the spread of pests or disease.

THIS BUD’S FOR YOU

Illinois regulations bar pesticides once the plants have flowered, so Ataraxia grows garlic, a natural pest repellent, alongside the cannabis in the flower room. Plants here get 12 hours of light. Buds are ready for harvest when they are covered with fibers called trichomes, which contain the drug’s active ingredients, THC and CBD.

MUNCHIES

After cutting and drying, marijuana can be turned into oils, creams, smokeable products and edibles like chocolates. Ataraxia has hired chefs Joseph Pierro and Lenny Ganshirt to create original recipes using cannabis. They won’t reveal their secrets, but ingredients on their kitchen shelves include coconut flakes, chocolate, molasses, flaxseed and marshmallows.

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