Sorry 'bout the glitch... still learning how to use my new "smart" phone. Sometimes it seems like it's smarter than me...
stickman said:
OK, fair enough... take what you need and leave the rest.
stickman said:
I've seen the wrapping material you mention maybe once. It's easier to find at the Hydroponic shops, but if you really want cheap... potato chip bags turned inside-out are mostly aluminized mylar, and free if you know where to look.
The first-round seedlings have gotten big enough that I clipped the Chinense varieties to force axillary growth (branching). I left the Aji Oro alone since its leaf canopy is open enough to let in the light needed to grow out new branches.
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stettoman said:Those "Kurts" came up 100%.
Devv said:
It's everywhere here. But you can find Biochar locally; I have to make it. Cooking as I typo I like to potato chip bag idea' never thought of that.
Do you always force the side growth? I guess it's a good way to get more mileage in you climate?
Any issue with bugs? The one thing that always annoyed me with the standard plastic pots was that the large black ants would always borrow into my plants through the drain holes and try to make a home. Have you noticed this?stickman said:One of the things I love about the Airpots is that it's almost impossible to overwater... just give them all they'll hold and let the excess drain out. You might have to water a bit more often and you end up with the thickest root ball with no circling.
Blister said:Any issue with bugs? The one thing that always annoyed me with the standard plastic pots was that the large black ants would always borrow into my plants through the drain holes and try to make a home. Have you noticed this?
Neil
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Datil said:Less chit-chat and more pics Rick!
Just kidding this thread is full of nice info, i scroll back and forth old posts and always notice something underlooked and useful
Have a nice weekend my friend
Fab
Yea they're the large carpenter ants that come out searching for a new home early in the season. I'm guessing that they find the coco a great, easy digging medium to build a home in. It's kind of annoying to come out and see a pile of coco next to the drain hole because one burrowed it's way in. I haven't had as much of a problem since I switched to the fabric pots though.stickman said:
No, I haven't Neil... What's your soil like? Do you have a lot of clay? I'm wondering if the Ants like it in the pots because it's such easy digging. We have really sandy soil here and it's mostly open... not many trees about except ornamentals and screens grown for windbreaks or for privacy, so really easy digging and not much to eat for Carpenter Ants, which are the only large black Ants I know about in our area. What we seem to have mostly are the really small cinnamon-colored ants that like grease more than sugar.
+1 on the Ant fly patterns! When the fish are on them here, they won't hit anything else unless it's much larger... Grasshopper patterns or streamers. My philosophy is " When in doubt... Throw groceries at 'em."Blister said:Yea they're the large carpenter ants that come out searching for a new home early in the season. I'm guessing that they find the coco a great, easy digging medium to build a home in. It's kind of annoying to come out and see a pile of coco next to the drain hole because one burrowed it's way in. I haven't had as much of a problem since I switched to the fabric pots though.
On the plus side, the black ant is an easy fly to tie and works great for trout when all those buggers are out.
I may also try topping a few of my plants this year like you did. I haven't done it before, but figured that I might as well see how it works. Did you top it at the fork?
Neil
Cheers Frank! And the same back atcha!moruga welder said:all is looking great Rick ! Heres to a great summer !
Heh...white mulch... I like that.tctenten said:I have that same white mulch on my beds too. It is supposed to warm up a bit here this week. Hopefully that will be the end of it!!
stettoman said:50s today in zone 3 (I was informed not long ago that the demarcation between zone 3b and 4a has been moved from 50 miles south of me to 25 miles north. Now I'm getting spammed by fruit tree nurseries!!), and I believe I'm the owner of the last berm of white mulch in this part of the state. Those nor'easters, man, really hold up your anticipation for spring, eh?
Don't worry though, my neck of the woods is known for super nice weather for the last two weeks of March, then we get 36 inches of snow through April.....
Yeah it is Rick, sandy with great drainage, exactly what my dad has on his propity 25 miles or so southeast of us. We are physically in what's called the Lake Agassiz Basin, which goes roughly 45 miles outside and along the Red River of the North. The soil literally a half mile to our east is what you describe, but we are in a HIGH nutrient silt lakebed that drained about 10,000 years ago. You could plant golf balls in this stuff and clubs would come up. But there's very little drainage. When it's wet you'll lose a shoe in it, when it's dry it is concrete.stickman said:
We don't usually get them this late in the season Eric, but the New England weather is and ever shall be unpredictable... If we have an article of faith here, that's it. Just gotta hope for the best and drive on.
Winters in Minnesota may be long, but your soil is worth it, isn't it? Looking northwest of Minneapolis I see it's glacial moraine soils, so sandy, ya?
stettoman said:You could plant golf balls in this stuff and clubs would come up
stettoman said:Yeah it is Rick, sandy with great drainage, exactly what my dad has on his propity 25 miles or so southeast of us. We are physically in what's called the Lake Agassiz Basin, which goes roughly 45 miles outside and along the Red River of the North. The soil literally a half mile to our east is what you describe, but we are in a HIGH nutrient silt lakebed that drained about 10,000 years ago. You could plant golf balls in this stuff and clubs would come up. But there's very little drainage. When it's wet you'll lose a shoe in it, when it's dry it is concrete.
It's funny you bring this up, I was just going out to collect a jar of the 8th acre for testing. I'm planning to till in an aerator this spring, I need loam and this ain't it.
stettoman said:Here it is, Rick. Looks can be deceiving, trust me, you don't want to try to walk across this stuff after a quarter inch of rainfall. To add to this, +/- 15 inches beneath this is a layer of solid clay, may as well be caliche. Corn grows great in it, as do squash and some others, EVERYTHING will start to grow in it, but if the soil isn't cultivated regularly and if it rains too often (like last year), tubers especially suffer, but root systems just can't breath....
The phone cam lightened it up quite a bit, this shit is JET black...