Posted on 03/08/2022 8:46:33 AM PST by orsonwb
Sounds good.
I’ve heard of him but haven’t read his books yet. Will check him out. Thanks.
I’ve heard some good feedback on that. But, to me at least, seems a lot more complicated than just planting in soil. Good to look into more though.
Pretty elaborate?
What keeps the water pumping/circulating, etc?
Requires electrickity, right?
I love the thought....just wondering how involved...compared to say...container gardening.
We get tiny biting ants on our raspberries- they don’t hurt or anything, but are annoying-
lol- good idea=- will have to try that-
lol- good idea=- will have to try that- Could cover the real tomatoes- and hand the red fake ones outside the netting, and the animals will get frustrated and not even bother trying for the real ones- -
Or one could just pee in the garden.
Squash vine borers can be defeated by wrapping the stems in foil just at ground level.
Also, as the plant grows, every few feet, bury part of the stem under dirt and weigh it down with a rock. It will put out new roots there and if the vine borers get the stem the new roots will provide the water and nutrients the plant needs to keep it alive.
There is also the factor of timing. Start the plants in large peat pots and don’t put them in the ground until after the vine borer egg laying time is over. It will be a later crop, but you will still get one.
Plus there is the option of row covers over the plants until vine borer season is over.
Another thing to help stop pests is to burn plant waste at the end of the season and if, when you are digging in the garden, you find the grubs in the soil, squash them.
I had great success with planting my potatoes as bucket potatoes.
Cut the bottoms out of white plastic buckets and place them on the ground. Inside the buckets, lay the seed potato pieces right on top of the dirt and cover with wood chips.
I had my best crops that way. The potatoes I planted in the dirt got half eaten by slugs but the ones in the wood chips were untouched and a great size.
The added bonus is that they come out so clean when you harvest them.
I did have a battle with tomato hornworms one year and now regularly go out and monitor my plants about twice a week and pick off bugs. Nasty business but it helps a lot. UV flashlights are great for finding the critters at night.
One thing I am trying this year is beneficial insects from this place - Arbico organics.
The best places I have found for seeds are Territorial Seed Co, Jung Seeds, Johnny’s Selected Seeds, and Pinetree Seeds.
That is a fantastic idea.
Too strong. Pee in bottles, age for at least a few days, then dilute 10:1
I guess there’s a book on the subject called Liquid Gold. For extreme times, there’s another book called The Humanure Handbook.
The water flow is not supposed to be fast; and, the grow pipes are almost horizontal. An elevated tank would supply steady flow for a time, then you'd have to pump it back up again.
Going around the horn, I have:
Tomatoes, serrano peppers, onions, carrots, cantaloupe, artichokes, bell peppers and a baby avacado tree.
I grow enough so that I can barter with my neighbor for venison.
Yes we just had collards the other night and I took a bag to my sister. They were great. We had them at Christmas and New Years also. I’m making salads with the spinach and Swiss chard.
That’s a good variety of produce. Barter will probably become even more important before too long.
Growing some/most/all of your own food is, and has always been, a prudent thing to do.
I’m adding a greenhouse to our self-sufficiency arsenal now. If the weather cooperates I’ll finish it up this weekend.
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