NFR 2025 Gardening Growing Thread

Non-fishing related
Yeah overdue starting a new thread. Not much news other than i have dug up all our begonia bulb and put in the greenhouse . Raked swept the balance of leaves . Digging another yard of my compost tomorrow and planning greenhouse starting dates . Still have a lot of parsley and oregano growing and shallots , winter stuff all growing swiftly. Favas and biennial broccoli from Sept planting about 30” tall. Temps very very mild . Lowest temp here so far since winter began is about 38-40 degrees. Garlic is taller than usual for January. Narcissus , and other bulbs on there way. Have made a soil amendment list. Will get it in the ground/ raised beds in the next month- 50 lbs cottonseed meal, 25lbs kelp meal, 12 lbs bonemeal , some worm castings(12. Lg bags) maybe ght grab 30 lbs of alfafa pellets. Happy gardening!
 
I have been trying to reduce my tomato and pepper insanity. Intended to plant 14 tomatoes of varieties saved and annually rotated. Well I put about 60 extra plants out and posted on the neighborhood page and as a plant pusher managed topass on a lot tothe neighborhood. But ended up planting 36 this year… nutso. I treat my plants like extended family needed care .
 
I do garden in a neighbors back yard by arrangement. In that back yard a neighbor actoss the alley mows it for him and has an old composting yard debris pile back there. I captured a pic of a Dracunculus vulgaris voodoo lily or stink plant growing back there. 30 years ago at my house I sold I had one pop up in my herb garden. I determined it was transplanted via some garden center mulch or truck load I purchased. I have
To avoid this damn plant as I seem to be at war with certain plant families that gift me hives and other crap. So far rue o Grace, english Ivy, cedar pollen, voodoo lily, oxyclean and various chem cleaners… Yipeee. The list seems to grow as i grow older. The environment that surrounds me thinks I am having too much fun in retiement apparentlyIMG_7407.jpeg
 
Ok I need some help here, WTF is wrong with my zucc plants? Not enough water? to much water? I do NOT water over the top of them i only water under the leaves to the root. I also noticed the small zucchini that are growing are all shriveling up and limp
 

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Ok I need some help here, WTF is wrong with my zucc plants? Not enough water? to much water? I do NOT water over the top of them i only water under the leaves to the root. I also noticed the small zucchini that are growing are all shriveling up and limp
Check out the link. I don’t grow zucchini tho. Looks like a water issue maybe. Plus with the heat the past few days.

 
Ok I need some help here, WTF is wrong with my zucc plants? Not enough water? to much water? I do NOT water over the top of them i only water under the leaves to the root. I also noticed the small zucchini that are growing are all shriveling up and limp

Ok I need some help here, WTF is wrong with my zucc plants? Not enough water? to much water? I do NOT water over the top of them i only water under the leaves to the root. I also noticed the small zucchini that are growing are all shriveling up and limp

Buying large quantities of 3 way or 4 way soil delivered or uPick up can be questionable depending on source and methods. Often you just don’t know what they are using to compost nor from what sources
 

Buying large quantities of 3 way or 4 way soil delivered or uPick up can be questionable depending on source and methods. Often you just don’t know what they are using to compost nor from what sources
This is especially true of yard debris claim centers where you pay to dump someone breiflychecks your load of wood (no paint or stain) dirt, property clippings etc etc. they grind it up and compost in huge piles. If it is a place where the fills and amendments are graded then you are
More apt to get an uncontaminated product. Much of this country has dump sites. My grandpa pouredgasoline fuels and flamibles into mole holes …i pay a premium for products from sources I trust.
 
Garden this evening. Recent treatment of soluable humic acid poder to all plants. About 1 Tablsp per gallon. 13 gallons of the magic elixer a few days ago.
 

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Huh! My wife and I were working in the garden last night and she asked when we should harvest the garlic........ maybe SOON. Nice!!
My first time growing it. I harvested 3 weeks after trimming scapes as the bottom 2-3 leaves were yellowing because that's what the Internet consensus seemed to be. The hardest part is waiting the few weeks until we can use them.
 
My gardening is showing mixed results this year. I guess that's normal for me. Let's see, I had major success with radishes - Yay! But anyone can grow radishes. Onions look to be a bust again this year. I started seeds in a tray on the windowsill and some direct sowing in the raised bed. The better ones stand at 4.5" tall still. Not much different from when transplanted. Spinach, what there is of it, is a whooping 1.5" tall. Sheesh, what's with that? Lettuce and carrots - got lots of those, but I've had times when I couldn't even get lettuce to grow. Sugar snap peas are coming along well, but nothing to harvest yet. Tomatoes are interesting. I put 4 plants in my tomato house cold frame/green house. 3 are coming along just fine, but the 4th, in the NE corner is wilting and turning yellow. Why? They all have the same soil, fertilizer, light exposure, and warmth. I put the other 2 plants in a raised bed, and this year they are taller than the green house plants. Go figure. But a couple of the Sungolds in the green house are setting some tomatoes and may ripen is a couple weeks.

I thought about pulling out all my strawberry plants last fall, as they are fairly old. Didn't get around to it, so thought I'd pull 'em out this spring. Didn't get around to it, so threw some fertilizer on them and have my best strawberry production ever from this raised bed. However, the majority of the berries are little suckers, about 1/2" or less. What's up with that? Not at all like the big wonderful berries I buy at Spooner's berry stand.

I also have 2 apple trees, both loaded with small apples. I think I'll do a "June drop" thinning later this week to hopefully get some larger size apples later on. My Italian prune/plum tree looks to have very little fruit again this year. I may need more bees for pollination.

That's the Salmo gardening report. Still about as far away from having a green thumb as ever!
 
An interesting berry year; great year for 3 of the 4 crops.

The June strawberries are winding down, with 4 4 x12 raised beds lots of berries. The plants were loaded with large berries, lots of jam and frozen berries and the neighbors and family sharing the bounty. Best crop ever. Experimented with 8 different types with 6 clear winners.

The raspberries (5 10-foot rows) are having a poor year. Just starting to pick the few berries - will be worst crop ever.

The Marion berries (1 10-foot row) are load and generally produce large favorable berries. Looks to be another great crop and will be sharing

Just starting to pick blue berries (10 bushes with 2 being 40 years old) and the bushes are loaded and unless have a usual weather situation likely to be the best crop ever.

Curt
 
My gardening is showing mixed results this year. I guess that's normal for me. Let's see, I had major success with radishes - Yay! But anyone can grow radishes. Onions look to be a bust again this year. I started seeds in a tray on the windowsill and some direct sowing in the raised bed. The better ones stand at 4.5" tall still. Not much different from when transplanted. Spinach, what there is of it, is a whooping 1.5" tall. Sheesh, what's with that? Lettuce and carrots - got lots of those, but I've had times when I couldn't even get lettuce to grow. Sugar snap peas are coming along well, but nothing to harvest yet. Tomatoes are interesting. I put 4 plants in my tomato house cold frame/green house. 3 are coming along just fine, but the 4th, in the NE corner is wilting and turning yellow. Why? They all have the same soil, fertilizer, light exposure, and warmth. I put the other 2 plants in a raised bed, and this year they are taller than the green house plants. Go figure. But a couple of the Sungolds in the green house are setting some tomatoes and may ripen is a couple weeks.

I thought about pulling out all my strawberry plants last fall, as they are fairly old. Didn't get around to it, so thought I'd pull 'em out this spring. Didn't get around to it, so threw some fertilizer on them and have my best strawberry production ever from this raised bed. However, the majority of the berries are little suckers, about 1/2" or less. What's up with that? Not at all like the big wonderful berries I buy at Spooner's berry stand.

I also have 2 apple trees, both loaded with small apples. I think I'll do a "June drop" thinning later this week to hopefully get some larger size apples later on. My Italian prune/plum tree looks to have very little fruit again this year. I may need more bees for pollination.

That's the Salmo gardening report. Still about as far away from having a green thumb as ever!
what is a june drop??
 
An interesting berry year; great year for 3 of the 4 crops.

The June strawberries are winding down, with 4 4 x12 raised beds lots of berries. The plants were loaded with large berries, lots of jam and frozen berries and the neighbors and family sharing the bounty. Best crop ever. Experimented with 8 different types with 6 clear winners.

The raspberries (5 10-foot rows) are having a poor year. Just starting to pick the few berries - will be worst crop ever.

The Marion berries (1 10-foot row) are load and generally produce large favorable berries. Looks to be another great crop and will be sharing

Just starting to pick blue berries (10 bushes with 2 being 40 years old) and the bushes are loaded and unless have a usual weather situation likely to be the best crop ever.

Curt
hey curt. i have a few blue berries, and added a few new plants this year. are you aware of any guidance on the web? about how to properly prune the bushes ? i know, not now, but when appropriate. thx.
 
My gardening is showing mixed results this year. I guess that's normal for me. Let's see, I had major success with radishes - Yay! But anyone can grow radishes. Onions look to be a bust again this year. I started seeds in a tray on the windowsill and some direct sowing in the raised bed. The better ones stand at 4.5" tall still. Not much different from when transplanted. Spinach, what there is of it, is a whooping 1.5" tall. Sheesh, what's with that? Lettuce and carrots - got lots of those, but I've had times when I couldn't even get lettuce to grow. Sugar snap peas are coming along well, but nothing to harvest yet. Tomatoes are interesting. I put 4 plants in my tomato house cold frame/green house. 3 are coming along just fine, but the 4th, in the NE corner is wilting and turning yellow. Why? They all have the same soil, fertilizer, light exposure, and warmth. I put the other 2 plants in a raised bed, and this year they are taller than the green house plants. Go figure. But a couple of the Sungolds in the green house are setting some tomatoes and may ripen is a couple weeks.

I thought about pulling out all my strawberry plants last fall, as they are fairly old. Didn't get around to it, so thought I'd pull 'em out this spring. Didn't get around to it, so threw some fertilizer on them and have my best strawberry production ever from this raised bed. However, the majority of the berries are little suckers, about 1/2" or less. What's up with that? Not at all like the big wonderful berries I buy at Spooner's berry stand.

I also have 2 apple trees, both loaded with small apples. I think I'll do a "June drop" thinning later this week to hopefully get some larger size apples later on. My Italian prune/plum tree looks to have very little fruit again this year. I may need more bees for pollination.

That's the Salmo gardening report. Still about as far away from having a green thumb as ever!

Can't beat Spooners! Best strawberries around. I just returned with a half flat moments ago.

I don't even think of growing my own with Sponners just down the road.
 
An interesting berry year; great year for 3 of the 4 crops.

The June strawberries are winding down, with 4 4 x12 raised beds lots of berries. The plants were loaded with large berries, lots of jam and frozen berries and the neighbors and family sharing the bounty. Best crop ever. Experimented with 8 different types with 6 clear winners.

The raspberries (5 10-foot rows) are having a poor year. Just starting to pick the few berries - will be worst crop ever.

The Marion berries (1 10-foot row) are load and generally produce large favorable berries. Looks to be another great crop and will be sharing

Just starting to pick blue berries (10 bushes with 2 being 40 years old) and the bushes are loaded and unless have a usual weather situation likely to be the best crop ever.

Curt
While I have a much smaller and younger plot, things are good here too. My raspberries are having their best year yet, but were moved 3 years ago so that's to be expected. My blueberries are having a phenomenal year as well, but none are ripe yet.
 
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