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Platystemon posted:Gro Pro makes them. Thank you! Found a local reseller for them.
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# ? Oct 28, 2021 04:30 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:16 |
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Thumposaurus posted:I grew a lot of lettuce and celery from veggie butts at the start of the pandemic. I did that with celery too but it came out sweet and delicious
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# ? Oct 28, 2021 04:30 |
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My tea tree flowers are blossoming. Pretty cool.
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# ? Oct 28, 2021 22:44 |
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B33rChiller posted:I've not read the thread since spring, maybe midsummer, but here's a little video about a little bit of attempting to save some things indoors from the garden over winter. Also, a video message to Hexigrammus on Vancouver Island about Solanum villosum.https://youtu.be/WBepQX1CUeM Ha! I'm developing a begrudging respect for those little bastards. I need to head out to the Okanagan shortly for an extended period so I'm busy trying to button up the garden and process the last of the produce before I go. After taking down the hoop house I found this hiding under the tomatoes in the back. Emaciated, starved for light, but still producing berries. I found a wonderberry under the tomatillos as well. I'm never going to get rid of these things.
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# ? Oct 28, 2021 23:28 |
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Hexigrammus posted:Ha! I'm developing a begrudging respect for those little bastards. I need to head out to the Okanagan shortly for an extended period so I'm busy trying to button up the garden and process the last of the produce before I go. After taking down the hoop house I found this hiding under the tomatoes in the back. I pulled those out from under my long beans, from behind my cucumbers, and 6 times from under my tomatoes and peppers this summer. I'd never seen them grow so much or quickly as this last year even with drought and heat for 2 months. Now I'll just expect them next year because I know they went to seed and I know that I didn't get them all.
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# ? Oct 28, 2021 23:46 |
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Jhet posted:My tea tree flowers are blossoming. Pretty cool. My Camellia sasanqua flowers are blooming too! Those look just like little sasanqua blooms, but way more pollen and less petals. Are they fragrant at all? Sasanqua's have a slight smell, but japonica's don't really have any scent.
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# ? Oct 28, 2021 23:49 |
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I know yall are busy trying to migrate your potatoes into your basements but I made a thread about harvesting/drying plants for looking at and crafting and poo poo instead of eating if anyone is into that kind of thing (or wants to be). It's the right season for it and they're all going to die anyway.
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# ? Oct 29, 2021 14:25 |
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Is it ok to lay sulfur before my freezing weather as I'm preparing a bed for blueberries next year? I came across mixed information suggesting sulfur can't be incorporated if the microorganisms aren't active during winter.
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# ? Oct 30, 2021 14:36 |
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You can put it down, but it won’t do much for months. If you need your soil acidified fast, you need to add something like sulphuric acid directly, or add ferrous sulphate that has mostly the same effect because the excess iron is harmless.
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# ? Oct 30, 2021 14:45 |
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Should I be watering garlic I planted over the winter? It doesnt get below freezing where I live, and there is maybe ~3 in of rain or so in an average winter month - often with weeks of dry weather in between. If I don't water, the soil will will be dry maybe 90% of the time, but I gather garlic doesnt do much until spring?
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# ? Oct 30, 2021 23:44 |
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Tremors posted:This year's pepper harvest was bountiful, aside from the dragon's breath plant that got shaded out. Hell yeah How do you like the sugar rush peach peps? I just planted some today!
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# ? Oct 31, 2021 16:38 |
I'm not sure if the gardening thread applies to house plants, but I need some help with my begonia (if there's a house plants thread, I'd appreciate a redirect). I noticed a couple weeks ago that some of the stems started to droop really bad. I haven't changed the watering schedule or moved it to another spot, and while the temperature increased a bit the past few weeks (hitting maybe 70-80s indoors), it's not scorching. It feels like it's wilting, but it's literally just the stems. They feel real flimsy, like they're made out of wet string instead of plant fiber, which makes me think it may be from a watering issue? It doesn't affect the entire plant, but I wanted to make sure that it wasn't something like some rot that I didn't notice or something. Picture of the whole plant, with the worst parts drooping down touching the rug. I originally tied some of the stems a year or so ago so that they would grow upwards instead of to the side, but now I fear that the plant would collapse in on itself if I removed the ties. Close up of the worst of the drooping stems. It basically just hangs on my finger. I've had this begonia for a while and it used to be my best plant, so I'm worried that something may have happened to it. Any advice would be appreciated.
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# ? Nov 4, 2021 00:37 |
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GrandpaPants posted:I'm not sure if the gardening thread applies to house plants, but I need some help with my begonia (if there's a house plants thread, I'd appreciate a redirect). Thisaway. Could be root problems
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# ? Nov 4, 2021 13:14 |
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Your begonia is now begone. Its hard to tell from the picture, but the soil looks wet. How long did you have it? I think it was over watered.
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# ? Nov 4, 2021 18:29 |
Fozzy The Bear posted:Your begonia is now begone. I've had it for a couple years now. I only water it about once a week (usually 7 to 9 days) and like I said, haven't changed the watering schedule or where it is within my apartment. Some (most?) of the stems are fine, but are noodley. I can check the roots this weekend, but I'd be pretty bummed if this died.
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# ? Nov 5, 2021 07:40 |
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I live in New England, specifically Rhode Island. Would love to hear what fellow gardeners in the area enjoy planting!
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# ? Nov 9, 2021 02:16 |
what are these guys on my kale, and how do i get rid of them?
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:08 |
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If you mostly neglect and don't ever re-pot the bell pepper seedlings a friend leaves on your porch, you get tiny (yet delicious) fruit!
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:24 |
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Chard posted:what are these guys on my kale, and how do i get rid of them? Aphids probably. Look similar. Start by spraying them off the plant and squishing anything that moves. I'd dust around with diatomaceous earth and go on a neem oil + insecticidal soap routine to start (at dusk or when they won't get a lot of direct sunlight is a good time so the leaves don't get burned). That's a lot of them and the damage to the plant will attract other things too. They're hard to get out of that sort of plant because they can hide near the base in the parts where the leaves converge, but it is possible. Whatever you do, check all your nearby plants and do the same thing. If you can remove leaves without killing the plant, you may want to take a look to see what are the worst damaged and take them off.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:40 |
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Pulled up the Japanese sweet potatoes after going out and discovering that most of the foliage had turned yellow more or less overnight. Pretty good harvest--this is from two plants started from slips, and a third where I just hacked off a bit of one vine that was sticking out over the edge of the bed and I just stuck the hacked off end of the vine into a bare patch of soil. Coke can for scale: Chonky boi in the middle there is ~a kg. This is probably the last major haul from the garden this season. Still have some bitter melons going but I'm just going to let them go overripe and then save the seeds. Been a pretty weak year for bitter melons, but last year was loving batshit several-pounds-every-week crazy so I guess it averages out. And finally...has anyone seen this before with ground cherries? These are from a volunteer from last year. Most of the fruit are normal ground cherries, but maybe a quarter of them are doing this thing where the fruit is maturing outside of the husk, and the husk is growing to a normal size, but balled up at the stem end of the fruit: If it was just one or two I'd figure just some fuckup/accident/whatever, but the plant produced dozens of fruit like that. Never seen it before.
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# ? Nov 13, 2021 01:35 |
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Chard posted:what are these guys on my kale, and how do i get rid of them? Stop growing kale. Gross plants jokes aside that looks pretty extensive and the soap/spray option might not be nuclear enough. At the least you'll likely need to cull and trim to mitigate.
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# ? Nov 13, 2021 03:46 |
thanks for the responses. i picked up some neem oil this afternoon, and tomorrow i'm going to start alternating some diluted soapy spray and the oil after trimming it down. the plants are kind of off in their own little corner which is why i've been neglecting them, but fortunately that also means they probably haven't been shedding bugs onto anything nearby.
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# ? Nov 14, 2021 03:22 |
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Are you in a warm climate this time of year, and can order ladybugs? Or are these indoor?
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# ? Nov 16, 2021 14:17 |
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This week I pulled the last of the fruits off my tomatoes and peppers, mostly stuff I'd left on for weeks to maybe ripen. Now I'm already planning for next year. Definitely want some new tomato and pepper varieties, will plant twice as many long beans if not more (I'm obsessed), and add at least one new vegetable - maybe cucumbers. I might also try to find some strawberry plants. My experiments with carrots and radishes have mostly failed over the past two years, so I'm going to look into soil amendments for those as well, don't wanna give up quite yet. Main thing though is I need more and better grow lights and seed trays with bigger wells. For the two years I've been doing this, I've used a $15 light I got off Amazon that is sufficient to start a tray or two of seeds, but they go leggy and have to be potted up and moved to windows really drat quick, and I only have so many windows.
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# ? Nov 21, 2021 21:43 |
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showbiz_liz posted:This week I pulled the last of the fruits off my tomatoes and peppers, mostly stuff I'd left on for weeks to maybe ripen. Now I'm already planning for next year. Definitely want some new tomato and pepper varieties, will plant twice as many long beans if not more (I'm obsessed), and add at least one new vegetable - maybe cucumbers. I might also try to find some strawberry plants. My experiments with carrots and radishes have mostly failed over the past two years, so I'm going to look into soil amendments for those as well, don't wanna give up quite yet. So you haven't had any success with root vegetables. Are they stumpy and not liking your hard soil? I've really liked gypsum to break up some soil. I like the 4 foot grow lights you can find at hardware stores for $50. They're on a chain you can adjust the height and can light two of those seed trays that fit 12 6-packs.
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# ? Nov 22, 2021 00:23 |
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OneGreenWorld, which has lots of great hard-to-find food plants, has opened up orders to be shipped in spring. Their berry offerings. They have Szechuan pepper plants! Not the hot peppers, but the plants that grow the peppercorns.
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# ? Nov 26, 2021 21:15 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:OneGreenWorld, which has lots of great hard-to-find food plants, has opened up orders to be shipped in spring. Dammit, I bought stuff (peppercorn plants) the last time this place was posted, now I'm gonna have to buy some raspberries for the spring.
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# ? Nov 26, 2021 21:35 |
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Motronic posted:Dammit, I bought stuff (peppercorn plants) the last time this place was posted, now I'm gonna have to buy some raspberries for the spring. A Canadian friend verified for me that Canadian and European elderberries do taste different, so now I can go ahead and order the harder-to-find Sambucus nigra.
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# ? Nov 26, 2021 22:02 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:OneGreenWorld, which has lots of great hard-to-find food plants, has opened up orders to be shipped in spring. Thanks, I've been trying to find some Chilean Guava plants.
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# ? Nov 27, 2021 19:42 |
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I moved from a third of an acre to .09 acre (not a typo!) and the front half is a gravel driveway that is sorely needed. I also live across the street from a nature preserve. There are bears and deer, and if I want to be able to grow what I love in my .04 acre, I need a deer fence. I interviewed my first landscaper a couple of weeks ago, and half the conversation was great, as we talked about what would and wouldn't grow in this microclimate, what I could/should take out, and how high a deer fence was going to have to be. We parted cordially, after he explained that I needed to do a formal land survey in order to decide what the borders were. I've been putting off the survey because I have a lot of household appointments I'm riding herd on. (Please come soon, electrician! I need that freezer outlet!) I realized what was sticking in my craw. I didn't feel he was listening to the fact that I want to do the gardening. I don't want just "a lavender" here, I want to look at 21 varieties of lavender and pick the three I'm most impressed by. I want beds laid out, I want somebody else doing the hard work of clearing out uninteresting plants and trees, and I want a fence that will keep some deer-attractive plants (old roses, a couple of apples, a Meyer lemon) safer. After that, it's mine to decide on, and anything available at a wholesale nursery will not probably meet my needs because I am a big ol' plant nerd. So, first steps, I'm going to talk to the neighbor; I think they border me on both non-road sides. I want to see what they think the boundaries are, and how they feel about a deer fence. If it seems like the smart thing to do, I'll hire a surveyor. And then I'll find a landscaper who will do the brutal work and leave me alone to do the finer work.
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# ? Nov 28, 2021 21:45 |
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You absolutely need a survey, to understand setbacks for your muni (which may nuke this plan) and probably a fence permit. The good news is that you can get very tricky about selection and co-planting to make your garden the least attractive option to deer (nothing is truly deer proof). I have a lot of allium in my beds and the deer stay clear.
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# ? Nov 28, 2021 21:56 |
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Motronic posted:You absolutely need a survey, to understand setbacks for your muni (which may nuke this plan) and probably a fence permit.
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# ? Nov 28, 2021 22:29 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:I am waaaay the hell out in the boonies; the town I live in isn't even a town, it's a "census-designated place". However, I do (thanks for pointing that out) need a county building permit because the fence will be over 6 feet. A fence setback would apply only to the front yard. That's definitely easier than it could be. Lots of places require setbacks on all sides and that's not much fun on small lots.
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# ? Nov 28, 2021 22:41 |
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Well, it's not much but it's mine. First garden since I was a teenager and first time growing in FL, so everything is an experiment. Halloween Nov 19th Today It's definitely over crowded. I vastly underestimated how large some of these would get. Going to be adding a small lattice for the beans, and also pull out the tomato plant I broke when running water lines and put a new one in. Just hoping to get some things out for winter, and then figure out wtf to do for spring and summer here. Also may turn part of my sideyard into raised beds to get some more space.
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# ? Nov 29, 2021 16:20 |
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Four Winds Growers, which I can vouch for as a reliable supplier of good citrus plants, https://www.fourwindsgrowers.com/ is having a sale on olive trees and preorders on other fruit trees. Through Dec. 6th. I've only ever tried their citrus, but they have rare plants of good quality.
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# ? Nov 29, 2021 20:29 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:Four Winds Growers, which I can vouch for as a reliable supplier of good citrus plants, https://www.fourwindsgrowers.com/ is having a sale on olive trees and preorders on other fruit trees. Through Dec. 6th. I've only ever tried their citrus, but they have rare plants of good quality. I've bought Avocado trees from them, the trees were small, but good quality. I would recommend up-potting them into a 5 gallon pot for a year, to establish their roots, before direct planting.
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# ? Nov 29, 2021 20:39 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:OneGreenWorld, which has lots of great hard-to-find food plants, has opened up orders to be shipped in spring. I got some great cold hardy citrus plants from them as well, so if you’re in a milder climate (I’m 8b), they have stuff that goes down to 7. The plants are also packed really, really securely. Kumquat and early satsuma, respectively.
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# ? Nov 30, 2021 08:01 |
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I got an aerogarden and started 3 cherry tomato plants about a month ago and they are going gangbusters. I remember reading there are some secondary actions I need to take to promote fruiting like trimming some of the branches or assisting pollination or whatever. Is there anything I'm supposed to be doing other than keeping the water/food levels correct?
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# ? Dec 2, 2021 06:09 |
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Salvor_Hardin posted:I got an aerogarden and started 3 cherry tomato plants about a month ago and they are going gangbusters. Prune off the suckers. You'll see them appear between the main stem and a leaf of the plant.
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# ? Dec 2, 2021 18:17 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:16 |
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Cool, I'll give it a shot, thanks.
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# ? Dec 2, 2021 19:15 |