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Mary, Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow?
1. Author: BuckyB93Date: Fri, 3/8/2024, 6:44PM EST
Rather than hijack a different thread thought I'd start this one.

I enjoy growing plants both indoor and outdoor plants. All my life I've grown up with and have continued with growing a garden. I grew up in WI after all so gardening is in my genes. No mater how often I wash my clothes, it's still in my genes.

Last few years, doing the apartment dwelling, my outdoor gardens have been container gardening.

Typical veggies are...
Beans: Pole beans so they climb up a lattice or teepee structure for a better use of space.
Peppers: Both hot and sweet peppers.
Tomato: I don't like tomatoes but I still grow them. I use them for making sauces, salsa, relish. Plus many people like them so I grow regular toms and grape or cherry toms.
Cucumbers: Again, grow them up a lattice or teepee.
Corn on the cob: I've done that for a few years but it's just easier to buy them from the local farmers and food markets. I did some Numi Corn a bunch of years back (remember Numi here on Cbid? He sent me some of his seeds) for a couple years but I was unable to keep the strain going.

Typically I get the tomato and pepper plants from the nursery in those 6 pack seeding thingies. The pole beans and cucumbers I start from seed since they are less available in seedling thingies. It's getting that time to get some seeds.

Herbs would be...
Chives
Oregano
Basil
Rosemary
Parsley

The herbs can be grown year round inside if you have a sunny window to put them in. If you have a ground based garden, oregano and chives will come back every year.

Fruit...
I've done melons, pumpkins, and stuff before when I had the space for an in ground garden but they really can't be done in containers.

I've done strawberries before but the birds and animals would eat them before they were ripe for human consumption. I guess I could put netting over them but I just punted after a couple of years.

Also did a rhubarb patch. Just a couple plants. Once that is established it grows like a weed and doesn't need any maintenance at all. Strawberry rhubarb pie is awesome.

I used to live next to a field/small wooded area and there were wild blueberries in the field and raspberries & blackberries where the field met the woods. I could easily pick 1 pound of each every week when they were in season.
2. Author: dkeageDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 6:45PM EST
OK
3. Author: BuckyB93Date: Fri, 3/8/2024, 7:30PM EST
Peas. I forgot about peas. However, they usually get eaten as I pick them so they don't last long. I like fresh peas.
4. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 7:39PM EST
I guess block me if you dont like it Bucky.

So how bout that 2024 election??
5. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 8:04PM EST

Ok I'll start.

Considering inflation, in goods and services, and "supply chain disruptions", self reliance and food security (Garden) is just as germane to the 2024 (s)election discussion as taxes or abortion.
6. Author: MACSDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 8:07PM EST
I threw pot seeds in the swamp on the side of my house growing up... a few months later there were some yuge plants.

I'm not that interested in it, but the wife seems to like it. She just doesn't know how to keep the bugs off her plants.
7. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 8:10PM EST

Anyone know the candidates stance on drug legalization, in particular Marijuana?
8. Author: PalamaDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 8:52PM EST
MACS wrote:
I threw pot seeds in the swamp on the side of my house growing up... a few months later there were some yuge plants.

I'm not that interested in it, but the wife seems to like it. She just doesn't know how to keep the bugs off her plants.


In my youthful college days, I started a few pot plants. My parents didn’t know what they were but my Mom once commented that they looked nice. Eventually my oldest brother, the cop, told me to get rid of them before our Uncle George, who was also a police officer, saw them. He knew that Uncle George would just rip the plants out and throw them away. And then, of course, I would have to answer to him. Gonz
9. Author: danmdevriesDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 9:03PM EST
When I was living in Chicago I had an attic apartment. There was an access panel in the bathroom to the unfinished attic area. I removed it, turned it into a small door and had a 10ft x 5ft area about 5ft tall I turned into a grow room.The smell was ...intense

Now I have cattle troughs around my deck for a small garden. But it's just some herbs, carrots, peppers, beets, collard greens last year. Haven't decided on this year, probably just carrots and peppers. Wife n boy love carrots. I love peppers. We tried a big garden once. I tilled up a 20x20 section of yard but my topsoil is very thin and it's all hard clay underneath so I'd need to put in some work to make it happen. I didnt, so it didnt. I planted a couple dozen 3ft tall fruit trees 10+ years ago. The ones that haven't died yet are still only 3ft tall. They just don't grow. The peaches grew great until we had a very deep freeze in 2014 and they all died. Had a couple plum trees that gave us fruit one season and died the next winter. I had grapes along the edge of my woods but they all died off. Did corn one year, deer ate it.

I'm not great at growing stuff.
10. Author: BuckyB93Date: Fri, 3/8/2024, 9:21PM EST
RobertHively wrote:
I guess block me if you dont like it Bucky.

So how bout that 2024 election??


Just thought I'd post a garden thread to share what we might or are growing and any tips or experiences on growing a garden. Veggies, herbs, fruit, flowers or whatever and stuff.

It's not politically motivated nor should it be. Why would I block you?
11. Author: RayRDate: Fri, 3/8/2024, 9:58PM EST
danmdevries wrote:
When I was living in Chicago I had an attic apartment. There was an access panel in the bathroom to the unfinished attic area. I removed it, turned it into a small door and had a 10ft x 5ft area about 5ft tall I turned into a grow room.The smell was ...intense

Now I have cattle troughs around my deck for a small garden. But it's just some herbs, carrots, peppers, beets, collard greens last year. Haven't decided on this year, probably just carrots and peppers. Wife n boy love carrots. I love peppers. We tried a big garden once. I tilled up a 20x20 section of yard but my topsoil is very thin and it's all hard clay underneath so I'd need to put in some work to make it happen. I didnt, so it didnt. I planted a couple dozen 3ft tall fruit trees 10+ years ago. The ones that haven't died yet are still only 3ft tall. They just don't grow. The peaches grew great until we had a very deep freeze in 2014 and they all died. Had a couple plum trees that gave us fruit one season and died the next winter. I had grapes along the edge of my woods but they all died off. Did corn one year, deer ate it.

I'm not great at growing stuff.


Heavy clay soil is tough, plant roots have a hard time with that.
It can take some years to convert a plot into healthy soil for growing. It's a lack of organic matter and a healthy microbial population in the soil to cycle nutrients that is the problem. The bacteria and fungi attract larger critters including earth worms that contribute to building soil structure.
Incorporating compost, mulching with ground-up fall leaves, adding coffee grounds and spent tea are good practices to move things along. They all have a high carbon content and nutrients.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/89/Soil_food_webUSDA.jpg

One way around it in the meantime is building raised beds and container growing like with your cattle troughs.


12. Author: BuckyB93Date: Fri, 3/8/2024, 10:00PM EST
danmdevries wrote:
When I was living in Chicago I had an attic apartment. There was an access panel in the bathroom to the unfinished attic area. I removed it, turned it into a small door and had a 10ft x 5ft area about 5ft tall I turned into a grow room.The smell was ...intense

Now I have cattle troughs around my deck for a small garden. But it's just some herbs, carrots, peppers, beets, collard greens last year. Haven't decided on this year, probably just carrots and peppers. Wife n boy love carrots. I love peppers. We tried a big garden once. I tilled up a 20x20 section of yard but my topsoil is very thin and it's all hard clay underneath so I'd need to put in some work to make it happen. I didnt, so it didnt. I planted a couple dozen 3ft tall fruit trees 10+ years ago. The ones that haven't died yet are still only 3ft tall. They just don't grow. The peaches grew great until we had a very deep freeze in 2014 and they all died. Had a couple plum trees that gave us fruit one season and died the next winter. I had grapes along the edge of my woods but they all died off. Did corn one year, deer ate it.

I'm not great at growing stuff.


I tried grapes as a vine thing that would climb up the lattice that I put in underneath a deck. I had a walk out basement and a deck overhead. I enclosed the perimeter under the deck with lattice and used it kinda like a shed to store the snowblower, lawnmower and stuff. I wanted to grow some vine thingies to make natural wall thingy.

The plants grew just fine but the grape fruit was limited and pretty sour. The leaves attracted a huge number of of Japanese beetles that I couldn't get rid of. I even dosed my lawn with Milky Spore to kill the grubs but if the neighbors didn't treat their lawn to deal with the grubs then it was a lost cause. Maybe I should have went with some sort of ivy rather than grapes. Grapes don't work well as fruit in northern latitudes.
13. Author: HockeyDadDate: Sat, 3/9/2024, 8:54AM EST
Had a huge garden in California with ten 5x5 garden boxes, lemon, lime, orange, tangerine, and apple trees. Chardonnay, Cabernet, and Zinfandel grape vines.

Currently I have two indoor AeroGardens and scheming what I can plant outside based on the HOA rules.
14. Author: RayRDate: Sat, 3/9/2024, 9:35AM EST
HockeyDad wrote:
Had a huge garden in California with ten 5x5 garden boxes, lemon, lime, orange, tangerine, and apple trees. Chardonnay, Cabernet, and Zinfandel grape vines.

Currently I have two indoor AeroGardens and scheming what I can plant outside based on the HOA rules.


You wouldn't want to get on the wrong side of the HOA Nazis, would ya? Eh?
15. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Sat, 3/9/2024, 11:23AM EST
Peppers do well in clay.

I grow plants for a living (farmer)

I can grow just about anything.

I like celebrity tomatoes I picked over 70 baseball sized tomatoes off 1 plant a few years ago. Some of my buddies wanted to do a contest 😂

Poblano peppers. Are my favorite to eat. But I grow several kinds. To grow decent corn you really need around 6 rows. The center of the patch is gonna be where it does the best. Corn needs lots of nitro

If you have any questions I can get the answers if I don’t know. I’ve got a few agronomist. Even if I haven’t grown it I know someone who has

Grew carrots cabbage tomatoes peppers potatoes sweet potato broccoli squash (yellow crook) some bush limas and some random beans I can’t remember what they’re called but everything did well.

Don’t give up if you have tough soil. You can still grow decent plants

For income I grow soybeans corn and wheat I like gardening just for the hobby
16. Author: DrafterXDate: Sat, 3/9/2024, 9:59PM EST
Do what I like to call the salsa garden... tomatoes and a few different
peppers.. have some wild onions and garlics that come back every year... got lots of basil and cellantro also... wife makes pesto and stuff... Mellow
17. Author: tonygrazDate: Sun, 3/10/2024, 8:26AM EST
I have a shrinking garden which at one time was 60' x 100'. Grew about everything from peanuts to catnip. Seems I no longer have the time or energy to grow more than the 2 of us can possibly eat. Last year I had 4 pepper plants, 3 tomato plants, and a couple each of summer squash and cucumbers, along with beans (only enough for two meals thanks to the mice) and some leaf lettuce. By mid-July the weeds started to take over and it all went to hell thereafter. I don't know if I will do anything with it this year, but I hope to move the fences to shrink the garden to a much smaller size.
We go a vacation 3 times or more a year and those weeks make things fall behind.
18. Author: RayRDate: Sun, 3/10/2024, 9:21AM EST
DrafterX wrote:
Do what I like to call the salsa garden... tomatoes and a few different
peppers.. have some wild onions and garlics that come back every year... got lots of basil and cellantro also... wife makes pesto and stuff... Mellow


Hardneck Garlic is one of the easiest things to grow up here in the North.
Plant the cloves in the fall (late September), they will root and sprout some green growth in Octpber. They survive over winter and start growing again in the spring. You get two harvests, at first you get the delicious scapes (the early flower stem) and then in the summer you harvest the bulbs after the tops start to brown. Keep some of the biggest cloves to replant in fall.
I plant around 50 cloves in the fall, that gives us plenty enough harvest to use during late summer through next spring.

19. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Sun, 3/10/2024, 6:15PM EST
Bought a tiller today. 2010 Cub Cadet RT65 H. H is for the 190cc Honda engine.

This thing is lightly used. Got it from an older couple in their 70's. They said it hadn't been started in 3 years but garage kept, they even had the manual that came with it.

It started right up even with the old gas.

Will do an oil and gas change on it bf I use it. Maybe air filter change too idk.

Thankful to find a lightly used pre-covid era tiller in my area. Wont have to borrow the neighbors tiller this year.

Over and out.
20. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Tue, 3/12/2024, 11:43AM EST
Got an old statesman last year with the engine locked up. Bolted on a harbor frieght predator and use it for my garden. Old one was completely worn out
21. Author: drglncDate: Tue, 3/12/2024, 12:10PM EST
we have tried to grow things over the last 8 years or so with mixed results. always seem to get peppers and zucchini to grow no issue. Tomatoes grow but we seem to get small yields. tried potatoes but i must have done something wrong because i am pretty sure i got less useable potatoes then i started with seed potatoes lol.

best experience and most fun i have had was a few years ago we took our pumpkins and gourds from Halloween and just tossed them into the tree line for the animals to eat ( we live in a rural area and get lots of deer, rabbits, fox, and other small wildlife. the following year we had vines sprouting up all over the yard lol. i assume they were eaten and then pooped out the seeds. we had so many pumpkins and Gourds we were giving them to friends and neighbors and the vies were taking over. even took one and put it in a wooden crate to make a square pumpkin which was pretty cool.

we have tried this every year since and none have grown.

we have extremely black thumbs lol.
22. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Tue, 3/12/2024, 9:50PM EST
Drg. Potatoes and tomatoes take a lot of fertilizer.
23. Author: BuckyB93Date: Thu, 3/14/2024, 5:43PM EST
The biggest PIA using my grow bags for outdoor garden is the bags are fabric and made to allow the soil to breath and have good drainage (good thing) but that also means they require more watering to keep the soil from drying out since the breathable fabric is exposed to sun and wind from all sides.

Watering the plants was pretty much a daily or every other day thing depending on the weather keep the soil from drying out. So I did some searching on the inter webs to see how others deal with this.

Many folks use automatic drip irrigation systems so I looked into them. I ordered one of these automatic drip irrigation thingies off of Amazon to give it a try for the container garden this year.

https://tinyurl.com/ywd5xy2d

It looks like a neat thing and has positive reviews. You fill a bucket with water and drop the water sensor level thingy and the intake unit into the bucket, run some tubing to all the containers, hook up the tubing the solar powered control unit and set the timing and watering frequency. The soil will get watered automatically every day for your set time as long as there is water in the watering bucket.

Most of these small systems only cost about $30-$50 so I thought why not give it a try?
24. Author: RayRDate: Fri, 3/15/2024, 12:50PM EST
^ If you are growing in a hot dry climate, that is an option.
Being in a temperate Northern climate here with higher humidity and more rain I haven't had that issue with fabric grow bags drying out fast in between the regular watering and fertilizing routine.
25. Author: BuckyB93Date: Fri, 3/15/2024, 8:15PM EST
Last year when I did the fabric grow bags I put them on a caddie thing with coaster wheels in case I wanted to move them. They were on a cement patio in full sun so probably extra warm from the cement absorbing and radiating the heat. Also my town is very hilly so wind the wind can kick up more than normal lowland areas so that is a factor. The soil would tend to need water within a couple of days.

I'll give the drip watering thing a shot. It's only like $30. If it turns out I don't need it, no biggie. What would be nice is if the system had a humidity sensor and would turn on or turn off based on the soil sensor.
26. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Sat, 3/16/2024, 7:24PM EST
Seeds prepped and started under grow lights.

226 plants total:

Chinese Giant sweet peppers x 10
California Wonder bell peppers x 10
Serrano pepper x 10
Giant Jalapeno peppers x 10
Tabasco pepper x 10
Sweet Tangerine Cherry tomato x 8
Better Boy tomato x 8
Mortgage Lifter tomato x 8
German Johnson (Lol) tomato x 8
Red Cherry tomato x 8
San Marzano tomato x 16
Orange Cherry tomato x 10
Zucchini x 12
Yellow Squash x 12
Eggplant x 12
Butternut squash x 8
Crimson Sweet watermelon x 6
Congo watermelon x 6
Straight 8 cucumber x 12
Cabbage x 12
Broccoli x 12
Cauliflower x 12

Direct sow (Mid May), not started indoors:

Blue Lake #47 green beans
1/2 Runner green beans
Corn, 2 kinds
Potatoes, 3 kinds
Onions, 2 kinds
Garlic
Lettuce
Carrots
Assorted herbs, no Maryjane, Jonesy

Took us about 8 hrs...6 of those hrs today.

It's a long season, and this is just the start of all the work.


27. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Wed, 3/20/2024, 9:04PM EST
Robert I’m gonna have to research these peppers. Maybe grow a couple of them to try out.
28. Author: DrafterXDate: Wed, 3/20/2024, 9:30PM EST
Planted a green bell pepper plant next to a couple jalapeno plants once.. the bell pepper picked up some heat... very good bells that year... Mellow
29. Author: RayRDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 3:41PM EST
DrafterX wrote:
Planted a green bell pepper plant next to a couple jalapeno plants once.. the bell pepper picked up some heat... very good bells that year... Mellow


That's not possible unless some jalapeno pollen got into some bell pepper flowers and you collected seeds from a resulting ripe bell pepper and planted the seeds for the next crop.
30. Author: PapaWhiskeyDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 4:19PM EST
Have you all tried growing your cucumbers on a fence? I usually stake a 4 foot fence along a row of cucumbers and help the vines to grow in the right direction then they climb right up keeping the cucumbers off the ground and easy to find and pick. Someone turned me on to that years ago and I do it every year. Works great!
31. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Thu, 3/21/2024, 4:57PM EST
Drafter I wonder if you got mexi bell peppers? They are exactly what you described and fantastic. It’s possible they mixed it up in the store.
32. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Thu, 3/21/2024, 4:58PM EST
I rototilled my garden tonight. It’s cloudy but after a big rain this weekend coming it should be nice when I work it again before planting time. I will plant late April
33. Author: AbrignacDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 6:43PM EST
Started working on my raised bed today. It's roughly 16 feet x 8 feet and 2 cinder blocks high. Gonna dump a load of river silt Monday and cart it all to the back one wheelbarrow load at a time.
34. Author: RayRDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 7:39PM EST
Jakethesnake86 wrote:
Drafter I wonder if you got mexi bell peppers? They are exactly what you described and fantastic. It’s possible they mixed it up in the store.


Could be. MexiBell is an F1 hybrid, a cross between some variety of sweet bell pepper and some variety of hot pepper.
35. Author: DrafterXDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 7:40PM EST
RayR wrote:
That's not possible unless some jalapeno pollen got into some bell pepper flowers and you collected seeds from a resulting ripe bell pepper and planted the seeds for the next crop.



Not sure but that could have happened... the wife collects seeds and does starters sometimes... I just figured since they grew up right next to each other they shared stuff...
kinda reminds me of this white guy I worked with in DC.. he grew up with black kids and he acted black... I reminded him he wasn't several times... Mellow
36. Author: RayRDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 8:11PM EST
DrafterX wrote:
Not sure but that could have happened... the wife collects seeds and does starters sometimes... I just figured since they grew up right next to each other they shared stuff...
kinda reminds me of this white guy I worked with in DC.. he grew up with black kids and he acted black... I reminded him he wasn't several times... Mellow


It sounds like it was an unintentional F1 cross in the garden if she collected the seed from a ripe pepper in a previous growing season. It can happen sometimes. Bees can do that if they have some pollen stuck on them from one type of pepper and fly into a flower of a different variety of pepper and the pollen gets deposited on an unfertilized flower. I've had that happen on tomato plants too. Of course, you don't what you've got until you grow out the seed you collected and get fruit. II's recommended that you keep different varieties of pepper plants far apart to minimize unintentional crosses if you intend to collect seeds.
Pepper flowers are self-pollinating, they have both the male and the female reproductive organs in the same flower, so they don't need insect pollinators like bees to do the work. But chit happens.
37. Author: DrafterXDate: Thu, 3/21/2024, 9:48PM EST
Gonna try again just to see what happens... haven't planted bells in a couple years cause they were small and deformed.. but tasted good.. Mellow
38. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Thu, 3/21/2024, 11:31PM EST
Sounds more and more like mexi bell peppers^. They don’t get as big as the regular bell. And they look goofy. But delicious
39. Author: RayRDate: Sat, 3/23/2024, 11:08AM EST
Jakethesnake86 wrote:
Sounds more and more like mexi bell peppers^. They don’t get as big as the regular bell. And they look goofy. But delicious


Yep, hybrid seed created from 2 different types of peppers contains the genetics of both parents, so they are not likely to look exactly like either one. "goofy" is good as long as they taste good.
40. Author: BuckyB93Date: Sat, 3/23/2024, 7:04PM EST
Started some pole beans and peas a couple weeks ago. Wet paper towels in a ziplock bag to get them to sprout. They sprouted just fine and last week put them in soil with peat moss pots. In one week they grew a grew about 10 inches (that's what she said). I just used regular potting soil and regular water to keep the soil moist. They are almost ready put in planters outside by now but it's still too cold to do so - seems like the damn things are on steroids.

I'll just have to do another round for the outdoor season. Meanwhile the cat will continue to snack on the sprouts. One thing that is odd... I did some catnip this past winter but my cat was not interested in it... Maybe he's an alien in cat clothing Think .

Gonna start some herbs from seed this weekend. Chives, basil, oregano, cilantro, parsley, rosemary, thyme (it's on my side, yes it is).
41. Author: RayRDate: Sun, 3/24/2024, 11:51AM EST
I pre-sprout pretty much all kinds of seeds Bucky. It is beneficial especially when you want to test the viability of the seed. With new or older seeds, it's a crap shoot sometimes when planting directly in the soil, you can't see if the seeds germinate unless they pop green growth With pre-sprouting you can also see if the radical root that comes out of the seed is healthy. With bad seed or older seed where the DNA has degraded, the radical root will look puny or deformed and will not continue growing.

I've used the paper towel method before, you can also use coffee filters, sand, diatomaceous earth, anything that will hold moisture in a sealed container.

As far as catnip, not all cats are attracted to the scent or get a high from the nepetalactone in it. Your cat isn't an alien, they say catnip. will show no effect on 40% of cats.
42. Author: BuckyB93Date: Sun, 3/24/2024, 12:22PM EST
I normally do the pre-sprout thing using paper towels or coffee filters like you mentioned to weed out seeds that won't crack. Didn't think of diatomaceous earth. White paper towels or coffee filters are readily available in most homes so that is what I use. Peas and beans and I'll do some cucumbers from seed too.

Tomato and peppers I just buy them in the 6 pack thingies at the local garden nursery. Probably about a month or a month and a half away before the risk of frost is behind us so we have time. Probably start some herb seeds later today.

My son and daughter are getting into it too. When they were toddlers they enjoyed spending time doing gardening. As they grew they lost interest. As teens they both are gaining interest again. If only they could tap that same interest to clean up their bedrooms.
43. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Sun, 3/31/2024, 12:37PM EST
Got both gardens tilled, went over them twice.

Mended the fence on the big garden and the small garden.

Went to hardware/farm store and bought another 300 feet of wire fencing and fifteen 6 1/2 foot posts so we can either build an entire new garden or, at the very least, build out our small garden. Might do both idk. Depends on time and energy...

Planted 1 apple tree and 1 peach tree. Fenced them and mended/extended the fences on the other 3 fruit trees.

Transplanted some of our plants into bigger containers--maybe around 50 of the 200 or so that have sprouted.

Still havent had to mow yet, but that will be this week I'm sure. Got around 4 acres to cut and weedeat.

Plus I've been doing a few things on the other wooded 40, up on the mountain. Put up a deer feeder on the acre or so of completely flat land up there. Got the deer cam up as well.

That's the lawn and garden report. Got blisters on my hands and I'm tired.

44. Author: RayRDate: Sun, 3/31/2024, 4:56PM EST
You gotta watch and defend against those deer, they'll eat your tomato plants, leaves, stems, and all.
45. Author: RobertHivelyDate: Sun, 3/31/2024, 5:20PM EST
RayR wrote:
You gotta watch and defend against those deer, they'll eat your tomato plants, leaves, stems, and all.



They'll almost eat anything out there...

We brought one of our Mimosa saplings up here from Virginia, and it got decimated by the deer. It lived, we built a fence around it to keep the deer out.

They've eaten our flowers and limbs of an apple tree too. We knew to fence our garden in from the get go.

I think I'm going to go Rambo on them this summer. "They drew first blood not me."
46. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Sun, 3/31/2024, 7:37PM EST
The damage they do to crops is enough to make you sick.
47. Author: BuckyB93Date: Sun, 3/31/2024, 11:02PM EST
Started a handful of herbs in pots today. Oregano, Basil, Chives, Lavender, Rosemary, Sage, Parsley, Dill, Cilantro, Thyme. They will probably break ground in a weeks or so.

Still too early to do put the plants outside but give them an early start inside. Yesterday bought bags of potting soil and time release fertilizer to fill up the grow bags when it's time to get them going. The indoor peas and bean seedlings seemed to have paused on growing, probably putting energy it make their roots. Will so some flower boxes too to attract the pollenators.

It's still a month or so before the risk of frost is clear so no rush.
48. Author: Jakethesnake86Date: Mon, 4/1/2024, 9:15AM EST
Been moving my plants inside at night. Trying to get them tough before transplanting in about a month. Prolly be a couple weeks and I’ll cover them up at night if frost will be possible. I have lost plants before trying to get in this early
49. Author: BuckyB93Date: Mon, 4/1/2024, 9:52PM EST
Agreed. It takes a week or two the indoor plants that are destined to be outside and acclimate to the outside temp and the sunlight schedule - they need a "harden off" period. I still have some cucumber seeds to get going. For Cukes, I pick pickle size versions. I haven't tried growing the English cuke but maybe I'll add it to the list to try.

My son's bedroom closet is pretty big and would make for a nice indoor grow room but I wouldn't do that (take over his closet). If the Zombie apocalypse happens, all bets are off. Kids closet will be a grow room.
50. Author: rfenstDate: Mon, 4/1/2024, 10:50PM EST
Anyone do succulents/cacti or orchids?
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