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re: 2022 Spring Garden Thread

Posted on 1/13/22 at 8:39 am to
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/13/22 at 8:39 am to
The Urban Naturalist off of Cameron St.

quote:

I've been listening to the joe gardener show.


Found it and listening now.
This post was edited on 1/13/22 at 8:42 am
Posted by eng08
Member since Jan 2013
5997 posts
Posted on 1/13/22 at 9:23 am to
I have numerous oak trees, a pecan and others that all drop leaves, I mulch them in with the mower.

I go around a grab bags of clean leaves from the neighborhood - it’s much easier.

Then when I need leaves for compost, open it up toss a few handfuls, fold the bag back over.

With that manure you can get it hot.
Posted by BallsEleven
Member since Mar 2019
6163 posts
Posted on 1/13/22 at 11:17 am to
I've got the only trees in the neighborhood, and they are 5ft apple trees
This post was edited on 1/13/22 at 4:56 pm
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/13/22 at 6:09 pm to
Got my new grow light in today. This thing is BRIGHT! I was standing in the corner of my dining room and I turned the light toward the living room and it lit it up like the sun. Damn near blinded my wife and kids.

Posted by eng08
Member since Jan 2013
5997 posts
Posted on 1/13/22 at 8:05 pm to
May need to drive through the older neighborhoods then
Posted by WigSplitta22
The Bottom
Member since Apr 2014
1485 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 10:03 am to
Why do you put light on them before they sprout ?
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 10:24 am to
I don’t use heat mats. The light generates enough heat for germination. And once they sprout, they’re already under the lights. So I don’t have to move things around. Been doing it that way for a long time. I’ve had too many heat mats fail on me and I find them a waste of money.
Posted by WigSplitta22
The Bottom
Member since Apr 2014
1485 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 10:45 am to
quote:

I don’t use heat mats. The light generates enough heat for germination. And once they sprout, they’re already under the lights. So I don’t have to move things around. Been doing it that way for a long time. I’ve had too many heat mats fail on me and I find them a waste of money.





I gotcha. Honestly i've never used any kind of heat source to sprout seeds. I started a bunch of mine in the garage this year just sitting in the dark on a shelf. Once sprouted i hit them with the light for 15+ hours a day
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 10:51 am to
quote:

Once sprouted i hit them with the light for 15+ hours a day


Yep, I have mine on a smart outlet. Turns on from 6 am to 10 pm and then shuts off.
Posted by cdhorn28
Member since Sep 2016
197 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 11:28 am to
First year starting from seeds, can I not just put these close to a window that has sunlight all day? Or do I need more time under a light?
Posted by WigSplitta22
The Bottom
Member since Apr 2014
1485 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 11:57 am to
quote:

can I not just put these close to a window that has sunlight all day? Or do I need more time under a light?





You are going to need more direct light then that. 15+ hours is a rule of thumb for me.
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/14/22 at 2:50 pm to
quote:

You are going to need more direct light then that.



Agree. Unless it’s getting direct sunlight from sun up to sun down, you’re going to end up with leggy plants on a window sill.

If you think you’re going to start seeds indoors regularly, it pays to invest in a good grow light.
Posted by NewIberiaHaircut
Lafayette
Member since May 2013
11562 posts
Posted on 1/15/22 at 1:03 pm to
I finally get to participate in the garden thread! I’ve tried a vegetable garden in the past but have always failed since I had to travel so much for work and the hose pipe doesn’t appear to work when I’m not home. I no longer have to travel so I’ll be able to tend to a garden!

I’m trying to hold back and start small so I’m starting with a 6.5’ x 3.5’ x 1.5’ raised bed. I bought a cubic yard of “garden mix” from a landscape company expecting it to be junk but I think I’m presently surprised. It has a good mix of organic material, I can smell the compost, and it appears to hold water well. Should I be adding anything to this dirt at the moment?
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/15/22 at 3:30 pm to
Welcome to the party.

quote:

Should I be adding anything to this dirt at the moment?


Probably not. If anything, I’d send a sample off to the soil lab for testing. If it has any deficiencies or needs a pH adjustment, that’ll let you know.
Posted by Zach
Gizmonic Institute
Member since May 2005
112513 posts
Posted on 1/15/22 at 3:34 pm to
I'm starting my Thai peppers indoors next week. I've had 5 years of success but I'm anxious to find out what happened to last year's crop. In July something started eating my peppers during the night. It's never happened before since animals don't like extremely hot peppers.
Posted by Longer Tail Tiger
Member since Dec 2019
185 posts
Posted on 1/15/22 at 6:01 pm to
What kind of apple trees do you have? Have you been picking apples from them?

I planted two bare root apple trees today, an Anna and an Ein Shemer that arrived today from Willis Orchard Company in Georgia. LINK

They were well-packaged and look like very nice trees.
Posted by bluemoons
the marsh
Member since Oct 2012
5518 posts
Posted on 1/17/22 at 9:00 am to
Where are you located? I've always wanted apple trees but didn't know they could grow well in south Louisiana.
Posted by Tbone2
Member since Jun 2015
581 posts
Posted on 1/17/22 at 9:26 am to
I planted an Anna apple tree last year and actually got 2 apples. IDK how it will produce but it's growing.
Posted by BallsEleven
Member since Mar 2019
6163 posts
Posted on 1/17/22 at 11:05 am to
quote:

What kind of apple trees do you have?


I've got a Cinnamon Spice and Winter Banana apple tree. I wanted to try something a little different than the traditional Anna or Golden Delicious varieties you see down here even though I may not be as successful with consistent production. These 2 I found though have pretty low chill hour req's. About 350-400 hrs. I'm right on the line between the 150-500hr and 500-750hr zones below so I should hit my mark most years.



quote:

Have you been picking apples from them?


I planted both of them in the spring of 2019 so they are both still small. I actually got a couple apples started on the winter bannana tree this past year. I've had blooms on both trees though so I'm hopeful they will both produce with time.

That first summer was rough on them though, especially the smaller cinnamon spice tree. They both got hit with apple rust but it hit the cinnamon spice real hard. I thought I was going to lose it. I treated it and it recovered though. The 2nd year Laura came through and stripped all the leaves on them. 2021 has been the only year they haven't had some adversity to battle through. Of course we have had a mild winter overall so I probably won't hit the chill hour requirement

I'm fine with it though because they are both still pretty small so I'd rather they focus on growth. Any apples I get right now will not have a large canopy to shade it from the sun and probably not do well anyways.




Sorry about the absurdly large image. I don't know how to resize it.
Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
14795 posts
Posted on 1/18/22 at 9:11 am to
quote:

Sorry about the absurdly large image. I don't know how to resize it.


I wouldn’t worry about that. I’m sure there are some aging posters who appreciate a large, high resolution image.

But if you wanted to resize, after the image web address hit space and type in width=XXX. "XXX" being the size such as 350 or 400 for example. Easy peazy.
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