Gardening and Plant Thread

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So what are everyone's plans for this next season?
I've planted 120 pepper seeds in the last few days: Reapers, Scorpions, habaneros, and bananas that I collected from last year's crop. I'm hoping to get 50% germination since the seeds came from plants that suffered through the worst pepper-growing season I've ever seen. I'll plant about 30~ more specialty superhot hybrid seeds once they get here. It'll be an El niño growing season, so I'm looking forward to hot and dry instead of wet and cold, which is more conducive to good yields from 90-120-day pepper plants. I'll post pictures once the cotyledons have risen.

I'm doing 500 onions instead of 300. I'm starting those indoors as well, instead of planting sets during Spring.

I'll do some 80-day sweet corn, and I might start those indoors just for the hell of it. Root crops are carrots, beets, and radishes, like usual. Might plant some collards.

I get to try out some hügelkultur beds I set up last year. I'm really interested in seeing how planting in those turns out.
 
So what are everyone's plans for this next season? I finally got myself a tractor so my garden plans have just about doubled.
Think I might also be planting some fodder crops for my chickens, geese, and rabbits so I'm not paying as much in feed.

My list so far is:
Tomato
Eggplant
Corn
Wine cap mushrooms
Beans
Potato
Squash
Onion
Cabbage
Carrot
Turnip
Spinach
I don't have a tractor (or a decent track of land) but for me it is blueberries, (more) grapes, lettuce, cauliflower, peppers, Japanese Yam, huckleberry. All hydroponic, we'll see how it works out. Might do citrus if I can bud kumquats.

Struggling with finding everbearing grapes, but a few of the rotundifolia cultivars bears promise. unfortunately it freezes for a long time so I guess I'll have to cross them myself.
 
So what are everyone's plans for this next season?
I finally cataloged the seeds that I'll be using this season and the total count of varieties that I'll be growing is:
18 tomato
27 peppers
15 leafy greens
10 squash
22 flowers
15 herbs
3 beans
I only start seeds for varieties that are hard to get, so I'll probably be picking a bunch of already started plants some spring.
On top of all that I'm getting into fruit trees and berry bushes, I ordered some apple and pear trees to add to my young and growing personal orchard. I also ordered some black berries, raspberries, and I'm trying out honey berries.

On a side note I have alot of fun with winecap mushrooms, just mix your inoculate into any woodchip paths or the mulch on your garden beds and they should easily establish, and come fall you'll have little burgundy mushrooms popping up. Keep your eyes open, as they mature within a few days. If you miss one and it get to mature to eat then just leave it to release spores.
 
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I would like to see a return of the gardening segments personally.
So would I. Until then, I got you:

Crooks and cotyledons:
Crook1.jpg Crook2.jpg Rise up1.jpg Rise up2.jpg Cotyledons.jpg
 
Awww, look at the cute little guys!
I want to garden this year so bad, but I still don't have a garden and I don't know if I will before the planting season is over. (:_(
Might I suggest looking into pots and growbags? I know someone who lives in an apartment and they have their little apartment patio filled to the brim with potted plants both ornamental and edible. It just might scratch that growing itch until you get a garden proper.
 
Might I suggest looking into pots and growbags? I know someone who lives in an apartment and they have their little apartment patio filled to the brim with potted plants both ornamental and edible. It just might scratch that growing itch until you get a garden proper.
Yah I did that before but I want to move soon and I don't think it's a good idea to take a bunch of plants and seedlings with me tbh.
 
Yah I did that before but I want to move soon and I don't think it's a good idea to take a bunch of plants and seedlings with me tbh.
When you get settled you could try an indoor hydroponic setup until you get your outdoor gardening situation figured out. I talked about it in the BP Off Topic thread a while back but I've been too busy to get it all together.
https://kiwifarms.st/threads/your-houseplants-and-gardens.117782/page-34#post-16716855

My Spider Farmer light is still going strong after five years of starting plants indoors. I can't recommend any other brands because I haven't used them, but fluorescent shop lights will work for transplant starters, and then the plants can be put into various sized plastic/clay pots for outdoors. The pots I use are 15"-22" rounds and 12"x12" squares. I do 2-4 pepper plants per pot, staking/trimmming them as they grow.

There are a lot of good guides on YouTube for it. My go-to is The Rusted Garden: https://m.youtube.com/@THERUSTEDGARDEN/videos

As well as the people on this site with extensive knowledge and experience.
 
Starting some cacti in my aquarium. Will post results if anything germinates
 

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Anyone here got some tips on how i can help my Lila Luzi (chilis) recover? Had to transport them with my Habaneros through -5°C weather and now they are hurting, but my Habaneros are doing fine for some reason even though they are more fragile when it comes cold temperatures
 
Anyone here got some tips on how i can help my Lila Luzi (chilis) recover? Had to transport them with my Habaneros through -5°C weather and now they are hurting, but my Habaneros are doing fine for some reason even though they are more fragile when it comes cold temperatures
Chelated iron is really good for helping plants replace cells damaged by excessive temperatures or wind 👍
 
I was accosted by a billion bugs while snapping these photos. I found some peppermint oil to mix with neem and soap, in order to fight the aphids. The genocide will begin soon(of the aphids, aphid genocide).
Have you considered planting lavender? My mother planted a bunch of lavender when she first started gardening (she liked the smell and the color) but it was only later on that we realized the lavender repelled bugs.
Rosemary and mint also repel bugs by the way.
I've been saving the seeds as I go.
That is how I started my goldenberry bush during my high school days. A couple handfuls of seeds from a box of store bought berries and a dream.
I will see if I can get some pictures from an old iPad. This was before I had a smartphone.
 
Have you considered planting lavender? My mother planted a bunch of lavender when she first started gardening (she liked the smell and the color) but it was only later on that we realized the lavender repelled bugs.
Rosemary and mint also repel bugs by the way.
I have trap-plants outside every year to protect the crops: bee balm, spider balm, and marigolds, which protected the sweet corn from a flea beetle infestation last season. I want the hot peppers to get hit by an infestation when I bring them inside to finish because it increases capsaicin content in the pods. It's a defense mechanism. It's the same reason I let carrots and beets get hit by a couple of frosts before harvesting; they pull sugar from the tops into the roots, making them sweeter.

I was going to fight the aphids with a neem solution until I saw that the spiders were taking care of them.
That is how I started my goldenberry bush during my high school days. A couple handfuls of seeds from a box of store bought berries and a dream.
I will see if I can get some pictures from an old iPad. This was before I had a smartphone.
That's really cool. Do you get a harvest every year? Or does it skip a year or two in between a good yield?

My friend upstate has a bunch of gooseberry, currant, and goldenberry bushes. I wish I had fields of those and cherry trees. They make great jams and jellies. Gooseberry jam is my favorite thing to make.
 
That's really cool. Do you get a harvest every year? Or does it skip a year or two in between a good yield?
The bush has good yields every year. Currently, my parents are taking care of it but I take care of it when I come home after uni.
It was not always smooth sailing as there was the Great Rabbit War at the beginning. It ended with half a dozen rabbits on the dining table before the hares gave up and left the bush alone.

My friend upstate has a bunch of gooseberry, currant, and goldenberry bushes. I wish I had fields of those and cherry trees. They make great jams and jellies. Gooseberry jam is my favorite thing to make.
I never made jams with them unfortunately, but they were excellent smoothie material and they also paired well with vanilla yogurt.
 
Four tricotyledons this year, so far. I had one last year, out of 50 seeds.
Tricotyledon.jpg Tricotyledon2.jpg
Tricotyledon3.jpg Tricotyledon4.jpg

This one wanted to be a tricot, but just couldn't get it figured out.
Goofyledon.jpg

I've got about ten so far that are showing true leaves.
True leaves.jpg True leaves2.jpg True leaves3.jpg

I said before that I was hoping for 50% "germination" rate. What I meant was 50% "emergence" rate. I'm close to that now, 47/120, 11 days after planting. I've got them in a small room with the average ambient temperature around 85F. 17 hours of light, 7 hours of darkness. They're getting hardened by some sunlight coming in through the window everyday. I circulate the air out using some fans twice a day. Overall, a good start. I'm still waiting on the hybrid superhot seeds to emerge. That'll probably be within the next 3-4 days.

The bush has good yields every year. Currently, my parents are taking care of it but I take care of it when I come home after uni.
It was not always smooth sailing as there was the Great Rabbit War at the beginning. It ended with half a dozen rabbits on the dining table before the hares gave up and left the bush alone.
Mother Nature must be very lenient in your area. It's 2-3 years between good yields for berries and cherries here. Then the birds go nuts and the nets go around the bushes. The foxes, cats, dogs, and hawks get the hares, because they're too doped and fattened up on perennial flower sprouts to pay well enough attention to their surroundings. It's good that you got some lean meat out of that skirmish. I'd be afraid of getting Tularemia from the ones in my area. But, If times get tough, Tularemia stew will have to do.
 
Mother Nature must be very lenient in your area. It's 2-3 years between good yields for berries and cherries here.
My mother told me to add a generous measure of chicken droppings when I first started and the every year thereafter. The soil might just be suitable as well. I have no idea what the real reason was.
Then the birds go nuts and the nets go around the bushes.
There were (are?) a couple hawks/raptors in my area. I think they kept the birds largely in check.
The foxes, cats, dogs, and hawks get the hares, because they're too doped and fattened up on perennial flower sprouts to pay well enough attention to their surroundings.
Initially the rabbits were so lazy/acclimated they did not even react when I banged on the glass door to try and scare them. That is when I knew that violence was the only option if I wanted my goldenberries.

I'd be afraid of getting Tularemia from the ones in my area.
I wear a 3M mask and plastic gloves when I cleaned them. I also observed them before I shot them with my crossbow. If they were acting sickly or strange and their bodies had irregularities then I would just dump the corpse at the edge of the woods nearby instead of skinning and cleaning it. Fortunately, all the ones I got were healthy and some were quite fat.

It's good that you got some lean meat out of that skirmish.
My grandmother was visiting us one summer and she has a taste for rabbit that she acquired during the Great Leap Forward/Cultural Revolution. Rabbit is almost impossible to acquire in chicom land, so she was especially pleased that Canada was hopping with them.
 
I'm not sure if I read that right. Someone here is trying to grow milkweed? If I'm not being stupid then that's hemlock and my question isn't anything to do with it's poisonous nature as opposed to why would you want to grow a weed? I mean sure low effort, but not properly used with companion plants it's just gonna take over and to be honest even with companion plants I dunno what you could possibly do with a plant like that.
If it's your plant, then hey go for it, but IMO it's ugly and at best accents a garden and in that situation, jeez so much work to make it do only that.

My mother told me to add a generous measure of chicken droppings when I first started and the every year thereafter. The soil might just be suitable as well. I have no idea what the real reason was.

There were (are?) a couple hawks/raptors in my area. I think they kept the birds largely in check.

Initially the rabbits were so lazy/acclimated they did not even react when I banged on the glass door to try and scare them. That is when I knew that violence was the only option if I wanted my goldenberries.


I wear a 3M mask and plastic gloves when I cleaned them. I also observed them before I shot them with my crossbow. If they were acting sickly or strange and their bodies had irregularities then I would just dump the corpse at the edge of the woods nearby instead of skinning and cleaning it. Fortunately, all the ones I got were healthy and some were quite fat.


My grandmother was visiting us one summer and she has a taste for rabbit that she acquired during the Great Leap Forward/Cultural Revolution. Rabbit is almost impossible to acquire in chicom land, so she was especially pleased that Canada was hopping with them.
As for the first three comments.
Chicken shit is great for a compost, but it runs really hot so you gotta let it sit for awhile (about 3-6 months) you want the compost gets to a dark soil look and texture. It is really important to not throw it in too soon as the N balance can be really high, but overall a great compost mixture for supersoils.

As for birds generally scaring them off works to a degree. Birds learn faster than you would think, though it may take some drastic measures (try to avoid making corpses in your garden though.)

as for foxes and the like, it's unfortunate, but you kinda just gotta kill them. They're a temporary problem if you do and a long term one that gets worse if you don't. Sorry to say it's just how it goes, if it's someone's pet try to make the effort to fix the situation through diplomacy first though... Unless you like your neighbors hating you that is.

The rest kinda sounds like psychobabble to me so no comment.
 
If I'm not being stupid then that's hemlock
Milkweed isn't hemlock. Certain species of milkweed are food for the larva of monarch butterflies. People plant them to attract many different bugs.
The rest kinda sounds like psychobabble to me so no comment.
It's not psychobabble; it's ruralspeak. Get out of the city. If you're going to phish, bring some better bait.
 
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