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Plant for a Patient: Bringing a healing Garden of Eden to CA patients PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jorge Cervantes   
We do not advocate breaking any laws with the information provided in this column.

Originally Plant for a Patient was patterned after Plant a Row for the Hungry program. However, the first winning entry made it clear that we must amplify it to support medical patients more.

A deep hole with drainage, a plant and fertile soil; but it’s dusty and hot in July, and these plants require a healthy daily watering. Photos by Jorge Cervantes.
A deep hole with drainage, a plant and fertile soil; but it’s dusty and hot in July, and these plants require a healthy daily watering. Photos by Jorge Cervantes.
Our expanded goal is to provide a publication where patients can show their gardens, tell their story in a few words and provide inspiration to other patients and caregivers. By participating in this program brave medical growers and patients help people understand how and why medicinal cannabis helps them live a less painful life

Of course we still encourage medical growers in a caretaker capacity to send in photos of their gardens and tell how they are helping patients. Many patients are unable to grow for themselves and providing them with free cannabis eases their stress level and the financial burden of acquiring non-subsidized medicine.

Some people take this process as a religious calling, as does the congregation of the MDMCR Church in Lake County. Their gardens blur the line between medical use, which is legal in California, and religious use, which they believe receives federal protection per the First Amendment and Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
GOOD SAMARITAN — A parishioner plants a patch of healing herbs at the MCMDR church sanctuary.
GOOD SAMARITAN — A parishioner plants a patch of healing herbs at the MCMDR church sanctuary.

Hand watering the plants after transplanting.
Hand watering the plants after transplanting.


Plant for a patient:  Herbal Medicine 101: Patio planting using a “screen of green” technique 
By Nature Boy

SPREAD THE RELIEF — This Jack Herer-strain plant is planted in a 5-gallon container and trained to grow horizontally as it stretches its limbs.
SPREAD THE RELIEF — This Jack Herer-strain plant is planted in a 5-gallon container and trained to grow horizontally as it stretches its limbs.
“I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired.” Fannie Lou Hamer spoke those words during the civil rights struggles of the Sixties. It still seems apropos some 40 years later, as the outrageous policies of the government locks up people who seek herbal alternatives to the pills big pharmaceutical companies try to force on society.

My mother has had breast cancer for over 12 years and survives, although the doctor who originally diagnosed it has died. She doesn't drink or smoke but does take long walks every day. First, she had one tumor removed; then another and still another. Finally she had a double mastectomy, refused reconstructive surgery and now chooses to wear her flat chest with pride. She often remarks that women shouldn't let men tell them how to heal their bodies, and has strong ideas of what she eats and takes into her own. 

A few weeks later, the vegetative plant has grown enough to be held down with a grid or mesh to spread and position branches to increase its canopy and yield.
A few weeks later, the vegetative plant has grown enough to be held down with a grid or mesh to spread and position branches to increase its canopy and yield.
I remember her chemotherapy, how sick she became and how she couldn't eat. After repeated begging, she finally agreed to try just half a cannabis brownie (no way was she going to smoke marijuana!) to ease her nausea. It took awhile but she cheered up and proceeded to eat a plate of pasta along with a salad. She was amazed - and so were we all! It was good to see her smile again. She got her recommendation shortly thereafter.

We got a grow book, talked with a few other patients and grew small plants for her with clones we purchased at a local outlet. She wasn't comfortable with more than a few plants, so we decided to keep them short enough to avoid detection but also increase her yield per plant by spreading the branches out as they grew, using a nylon grid from the gardening store. (First time nylon, next time hemp?)  The plants were grown in a sunny patio using standard organic soil and a bit of fish emulsion.

Here is the same plant as it stops spreading out and starts flowering. There is now a seamless canopy between this and the adjacent plant
Here is the same plant as it stops spreading out and starts flowering. There is now a seamless canopy between this and the adjacent plant
They were planted in early summer so they wouldn't get too large, and when we harvested we got just less than one pound from the whole crop. It lasted quite a while and after she finished chemo she continued to take it occasionally to help her sleep and when her friend was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, she gave her the rest with her blessings.

I feel like I got my own blessing from this by growing a plant and seeing how it gave her back her quality of life. Growing ones own medicine is simple and direct. While huge drug and Drug War industries lobby against it, patients have taken back the right to control their bodies when they're sick of being sick.

A multitude of small buds are growing from the immature plant, which will fill out and ripen for an early harvest. Photos by Nature Boy
A multitude of small buds are growing from the immature plant, which will fill out and ripen for an early harvest. Photos by Nature Boy
I'm not sure if I'll become a caregiver or ever grow again, but I do know that I'm glad I live in a state that allows medicinal cannabis.



How you can enter the Odam News garden photo contest

Every issue, Oaksterdam News will choose a winner of the contest for medical gardens and send them an autographed copy of Marijuana Horticulture: the Indoor/Outdoor Medical Grower's Bible - 512 full color pages and 1120 professional color images.

We urge other publications and websites to start similar programs in their communities to help raise the awareness of medical marijuana growers and patients.

Here is what we are looking for:

1.    High quality digital images, at least 5 megapixel in size.
2.    Medical marijuana gardens only
3.    Send digital images with a short descriptive paragraph and return e-mail to: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
4.     Mail high-quality photo prints to Odam News,
    405-15th St., Oakland CA, 94612, Attn: Plant for a Patient
   
Please include a few words to a paragraph or two about each photo you submit when possible. The information provided by the images of cannabis gardens will help other qualified medical growers produce better gardens. The contest will also help expand the feeling of camaraderie within the cannabis community.
 
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