- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: The 2021 Garden Thread
Posted on 2/4/21 at 3:28 pm to bluemoons
Posted on 2/4/21 at 3:28 pm to bluemoons
I'm wondering what the board thinks I should do with my hydroponic tomato plant. It's a bush goliath plant that I started last fall. I harvested a decent number of tomatoes already, but it's still producing. Right now I have over a dozen green tomatoes on the plant, and it is still making new flowers. The thing is, this is a determinate variety and I thought they were supposed to produce all the fruit in a short span, then nothing.
Should I harvest the current crop when they're ready and then pull the plant, or keep it as long as it seems to be going strong? It takes up a lot of space, so I'd hate to not be able to utilize that space if the plant isn't likely to produce any more.
Should I harvest the current crop when they're ready and then pull the plant, or keep it as long as it seems to be going strong? It takes up a lot of space, so I'd hate to not be able to utilize that space if the plant isn't likely to produce any more.
Posted on 2/4/21 at 3:40 pm to RC
quote:
Should I harvest the current crop when they're ready and then pull the plant, or keep it as long as it seems to be going strong? It takes up a lot of space, so I'd hate to not be able to utilize that space if the plant isn't likely to produce any more.
Sometimes you get a freak tomato plant that produces like crazy, well beyond the norm. I had one back in college that was still producing in January. I lived further south and the fall was still pretty hot, up into the 80s most days, and the winters were pretty mild too. Felt kind of odd picking a fresh Tomato for a BLT the week of Christmas, but I just let it go until some frost finally got it. And this was just in a pot with some old potting soil, not hydro. Might as well see how long it goes.
Posted on 2/4/21 at 4:46 pm to RC
It's not too late to go seeds is it?
Posted on 2/5/21 at 6:47 am to HailToTheChiz
No - first year in many I started something on time. I usually start mid february
Posted on 2/5/21 at 8:55 am to PillageUrVillage
I've been really high on this Fred's Tie Dye variety from the dwarf tomato project over the last 3-4 seasons. I also like the large barred boar variety and of course cherokee purples.
Posted on 2/5/21 at 9:22 am to bluemoons
Anyone notice the hard freeze we're supposed to get next Friday and Saturday?
Posted on 2/5/21 at 9:39 am to street pizza
Yep. I’ll be making preparations this weekend. I don’t have much time on weekdays thanks to it usually being dark when I get home (I hate this time of year). Gonna put my hot house back up and get all of the plants in there. Also going to set out the covers for my blackberry and strawberry boxes. Won’t cover them completely until the cold arrives, though. I’m sure they’ll be fine, but I may set up an incandescent light for them just to produce a little warmth. Looks like this will be a 3-4 day event. Then hopefully winter will be done after that.
Posted on 2/5/21 at 9:49 am to PillageUrVillage
Really the only thing I will be worried about will be my Ruby Red grapefruit tree. I'll cover and dig out a string of christmas lights from the attic.
The lemon tree I couldn't care less about, the apples will be fine, and if the satsuma dies it wouldn't be the end of the world. I screwed up and tried pruning when I first got it. I should have just let it go.
Everything else is in the store room with an electric heater on thermostat.
If power goes out though...
The lemon tree I couldn't care less about, the apples will be fine, and if the satsuma dies it wouldn't be the end of the world. I screwed up and tried pruning when I first got it. I should have just let it go.
Everything else is in the store room with an electric heater on thermostat.
If power goes out though...
Posted on 2/5/21 at 10:04 am to BallsEleven
quote:
If power goes out though...
Bruh, why even bring that up?
Posted on 2/5/21 at 10:15 am to PillageUrVillage
quote:
If power goes out though
I have Genie on standby just in case. They can't run the whole house but they can run the lights. I have a Big Buddy heater ready and waiting as well.
Pillage, the strawberries should be able to handle the cold. I am worried about my peas though. I will be trying to cover them.
Posted on 2/5/21 at 11:45 am to convertedtiger
I guess I’ll have to pick the rest of my cauliflower. I planted 2 varieties - one 80 day, one 120 day
Posted on 2/5/21 at 11:57 am to WigSplitta22
I took Gary's advice last year for my first time growing seeds and regretted it.
I recommend spending more $$ and buying something that will put out more lux. I put a link earlier in this thread, $40 light on amazon. Might need a couple if you're growing more than like 12 plants.
I recommend spending more $$ and buying something that will put out more lux. I put a link earlier in this thread, $40 light on amazon. Might need a couple if you're growing more than like 12 plants.
Posted on 2/5/21 at 2:27 pm to PillageUrVillage
quote:
Bruh, why even bring that up?
I like to harass my wife with things like that. Sometime it spills over into other parts of my life
Posted on 2/5/21 at 3:04 pm to jyoung1
quote:
I took Gary's advice last year for my first time growing seeds and regretted it.
Why what happened? I've been using pretty cheap light $20-25 range for the last few years with good results
Posted on 2/5/21 at 3:22 pm to WigSplitta22
quote:
Why what happened?
They worked in the beginning, but when the plants got to 5+ inches tall, they started looking bad. Took me forever to realize it was the lights.
I had to get a lightmeter to measure lux and light was only putting out 4k lux at most.
Maybe I had just gotten a bad brand, but it was advertised as grow light at home depot and it was very similar to what Gary had. Found it.
This post was edited on 2/5/21 at 3:26 pm
Posted on 2/5/21 at 3:41 pm to jyoung1
quote:
4k lux
Yeah, I’d say at bare minimum you need 5k. But I’d shoot for much higher than that. Low light makes them leggy and harder to harden off. I have about 20k now, but I’m going to upgrade to that 40k next season.
Posted on 2/5/21 at 3:53 pm to WigSplitta22
quote:
Can you link those lights?
Finally found what I bought on Amazon.
One of the reviews said they got 18,000 lux @ 6 inches.
Posted on 2/5/21 at 4:15 pm to BallsEleven
I figured this would be a good spot to drop a little info on Lumens vs Lux. Just in case anyone is confused by the terminology.
Difference between Lumens and Lux
1 Lux = 1 Lumen per square meter
Difference between Lumens and Lux
1 Lux = 1 Lumen per square meter
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News