GROW SHOP
GROW SHOP
WHAT ARE GROW SHOP
A Growshop arises from the need for the production and cultivation of hemp and legal marijuana. A Grow shop also sells products that can also be used for growing other crops such as tomatoes, peppers, bananas and various other exotic plants, which requires an artificial environment, for example the Norwegian climate could not help the development of the same crops. What are the grow-shops? In the Growshop you will also find information about pots, soils, fertilizers, lights, extractors and other equipment for the production, processing and harvesting of crops.
You will also find products for body care of adults and children, offering the opportunity to choose from a wide range of handmade soaps made from hemp combined with other natural elements; also you can find in the catalog ointments and soaps for children's skin, hand creams, creams against cellulite, moisturizing and after-sun, face masks, aftershave serums, and also a line for hair, for hygiene intimate with hemp and anti-age. Until a few years ago grow shops were places frequented primarily by cannabis users and cultivation enthusiasts. Today it's not like that anymore.
An ever-growing segment of customers is now made up of non-smokers and people attracted to hemp food and textiles. This change in customers is the product of that process of "normalization" of cannabis that is finally taking place in Italy. This is an important trend to know also to plan the dedicated space within the store for the various types of products and the communication symbology to be implemented, starting with the name chosen for the store. Growshop stores in Italy are booming as in the rest of Europe, think that only in the Netherlands there are about 400 stores. An example https://www.thebulldog.com/ You will find the best Grow Shop stores HERE GRASS AND OIL Grass Speaking of hemp it is placed in a context of annual herbaceous plants whose height varies between 1.5 and 2 meters.
It has a long tap root and a stem, erect or branched, with resinous, angled growths, sometimes hollow, especially above the first couple of leaves. The leaves are petiolate and provided with stipules; each of them is palmate, composed of 5 to 13 lanceolate leaves, with serrated-serrated edge, with sharp points up to 10 cm in length and 1.5 cm in width; in the lower part of the stem the leaves are opposite, in the upper part instead tend to grow alternate, especially after the ninth / tenth node of the plant, or after sexual maturation occurred (after the initial vegetative phase, popularly known as "rise"). Hemp plants are both monoic (useful for the production of seeds for food use) and dioecious. The male flowers (staminifera) are united in terminal panicles and each has 5 fused tepals at the base and 5 stamina.
The female flowers (pistilliferi) are grouped in groups of 2-6 in the armpits of bracts forming short spikes; each one shows a membranous calyx that wraps tightly a supero and unilocular ovary, surmounted by two styles and two stigmas. The plant germinates in spring and blooms in late summer, when the hours of light decrease (it has been shown that the duration of the vegetative period is influenced by the photoperiod to which the plants are subjected, the only species of Cannabis whose flowering does not depend on the photoperiod is the Cannabis ruderalis, whose flowering takes place automatically after a period of vegetative growth that varies between 21 and 30 days, and lasts for a period of 4-6 weeks).
The flowering period varies greatly depending on the species and varieties considered: C. sativa plants, originating from the equatorial belt, tend to have a very long flowering, up to 14-16 weeks and more in some varieties, while varieties of C indica, which originates in the subtropical / temperate belt, usually takes about 8-10 weeks to bring the inflorescences to maturity. Pollination is anemophilous (transport through the wind). In autumn the fruits appear, of hard and globose achenes, each holding a seed with a fleshy endosperm and a curved embryo.
Enlargement of the female flower of Cannabis Sativa; the "crystals" of resin are very evident The content of secondary metabolites binds taxonomy into two subgroups or chemotypes depending on the enzyme responsible for cannabinoid biosynthesis. The CBD chemotype, characterized by the CBDA-synthase enzyme that distinguishes cannabis for agro-industrial and therapeutic uses and the THC-chemotype characterized by the THCA-synthase enzyme present in cannabis varieties destined to produce inflorescences and drugs, is distinguished. The hybrid f1 manifests the con