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Anyone here grow Blueberries before?
I know they love acidic soil, which mean they are a container plant in AZ due to alkaline soil here. I bought a bush variety that grows well here from reports. What's the best way to get/buy acidic soil? I didn't see much at Lowe's outside of just adding sulfur to regular potting soil. |
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Anyone ever grow currents? I want just one small currant plant or bush or whatever it grows on. Can't get fresh ones here around Christmas. I like to use it as a garnish.
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Otherwise, they are really easy to raise. You've got the humidity they love but you are too warm. This the shade. |
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I'm not as far south as Miami. It can get to 30° here in winter but it's usually just a few days total. It reminded me about grape tomatoes better to grow in summer but bigger ones in fall and winter. |
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The do best in the Northwest and Midwest actually. They are tough though so soil can vary. But keep your PH between 5.5 and 7.0. The leaves will tell you how to regulate accordingly. Ensure you have good drainage as well. I would think you can raise/lower PH by adding adjustments straight to your watering system. I use 1g milk jugs with holes punched in the tops. Easy measuring. Great choice for a fence line BEP. |
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Planting some cheap and "weed like" Vinca flowers along my pool fence today. My red Mexican bird of paradise is finally going into full bloom near the backside of my yard. Adds some height to the smaller plants in front and finally looks nice. |
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Miracle-Gro makes a plant food called Mir Acid that can be used on blueberries etc. It's a water-soluble that you use when watering. Peat will also do a good job acidifying soil. We use cotton burr compost to lighten and acidify soil.
With all this wet weather I have an unusually high number of slugs and snails all over the yard. I use Sluggo for my containers and beds but really don't want to sprinkle it all over the yard. Any suggestions? KChiefs1, you're doing an awesome job! |
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I a word there. The only thing hindering you in AZ is that we live in Zone 9 so the soil sucks butt, as you mention. Blueberries need FULL sun. They love that shit man. Ironically, they grow best in a sandy soil. Mulch is really the way to go. Your biggest risk is the PH and alkalinity, which is big in AZ. Beyond that, they are low maintenance. Plant them in January, which is their dormant period. By spring, they will pop pretty good. Read up on pruning for best yield. If you want to drive the roots down, prune the flowers during year one. You can go with a 12 inch pot for the first year or two. Then go on up to 24. Depth is what you really want. You are going to want to protect them from birds when they start to bare fruit. Birds love blueberries. |
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So um.......what do I do with the $10 Misty Blueberry plant I bought today.....in June........? Just keep it in the small container for now and transplant to pot in winter? I'll probably just roll with an 18 inch pot or maybe even a whiskey barrel to start. I don't want to have to plant it more than once. |
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Goes without saying, you will need to water more frequently. Which raises your risk of screwy alkaline and PH. My first grow was a disaster but I learned a lot. |
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Can't keep in the house. The cat eats EVERYTHING with leaves, fake shit included. She's reeruned. Next option. |
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Some more questions for eDave in this post. Good stuff you're providing. And those in DC don't think you know shit?!?!
First, the small gardening job I did yesterday. Vincas along the pool fence, opposite side from my rose bushes. My new blueberry bush on the far left just for the pictures sake. http://i.imgur.com/KmaKGki.jpg http://i.imgur.com/ggui6Bw.jpg Now for the questions. Which side of the yard and pot type to put the blueberry bush in? This is the wall on the West side of the yard. Sun from morning until about 2 pm when it gets shade from wall and palm trees from neighbors. Would put pot right next to pepper plant in this picture. http://i.imgur.com/VgmDASL.jpg Or wall on opposite side of yard? This is the wall on the east side of the yard. Morning shade (picture taken around 10 a.m.) with this spot receiving full blast sun the rest of the day. Pot would go next to that cactus (called dessert spoon). http://i.imgur.com/6T9Mx3Q.jpg What size of pot? This pot is 18 inches wide but only 13 inches deep. I take it this isn't deep enough? http://i.imgur.com/DdeTQMh.jpg |
Is your blueberry a self-pollinating? The ones I've seen around here have to have another variety for cross-pollination.
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These grow nice and big here though. Both of ours are 6' tall (not my picture). http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f2...1/DSC09181.jpg And honestly, after this blueberry pot, I am pretty much content with our landscape and plants for now. The yard is pretty full. :D |
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Camellia? |
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Lewdog - Looking good. Yea, that pot is not deep enough. It's OK for now but should be transplanted next year. And put in where it will not get shaded at all.
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I'll get a bigger pot tomorrow and place on east wall by that cactus then. No shade there! |
This is cool!
A couple months ago, I bought these little cardboard tube thingies and roughly built a small box to hang near my garden. The tubes are perfect for mason bees. Well, it's just been hanging there since. This morning I noticed two holes have been filled, so we have bees!!! |
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https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...4e8ea51c23.jpg |
Gonna be looking at getting my seeds growing to start my "Fall" garden in Mid-August. When the June temperature soar here, I rip out my entire garden as it's not worth trying to keep the plants alive.
My plan is to do 3 Tomatillo plants, 2 Heirloom Black Krim tomatoes, 1 cherry tomato and 1 Serrano pepper. All will be new to me outside of the cherry tomato which I keep alive each year from August until June. These will be in addition to my Jalapeno and Sante Fe pepper plants which live year round with very little work. Main goal here......more salsa and attempts at chile verde! |
Been a while since I posted in this thread. Garden is doing pretty well, we have had so much kale we are sick of it. Lettuce, carrots and radishes are all done.
Tomatoes have been a battle with blight. Lots of peppers that I am freezing to use in Chili this winter. Had about a half dozen edible plums, 5 pears and the figs are just now coming on. Maybe peaches next year as they stayed small and hard. http://i63.tinypic.com/295u9up.jpg |
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Yard looks nice. I do miss grass sometimes. Quote:
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Nope, first time. Sounds like too much rain. |
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My blank slate starts in 4 weeks. House goes just behind the small pine in the center that I took down this morning.
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Getting my Fall garden going. 3 Tomatillos (new for me) on the far end with Serrano pepper plant in between. 2 Black Krim tomato plants (new for me). And 1 cherry tomato (always have). Plus the jalapeno bush you see which produces year round and never dies. It's a small garden but space is limited here. I rained a ton here today so I was glad I got my seeds in the ground yesterday.
http://i.imgur.com/9oqxA7O.jpg Finally got the watering right for the Lime tree this summer and it's producing very well and looking very green. It seems to be a heavy feeder for fertilizer and Iron chelate. http://i.imgur.com/mkF6OPR.jpg And who knew grapevines loved the Phoenix summer heat?! Grapes came out small but were edible, although the birds got a ton of them. It's producing great green foliage with this monsoon weather and is going great covering that ugly pool fence. http://i.imgur.com/PJeYCNb.jpg |
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Unless it's heat coming off the brick, I'd get to talking to a horticulturist pronto. That looks disease-ish Good looking garden though. :thumb: |
What's the latest in the year you all have potted a young tomato/pepper plant in KS/MO?
I have a spare hanging basket on our deck and toying with the idea of grabbing a veggie to put in there to see what happens. |
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House is moved and on site. Setting piers this weekend. Still a lot of work to be done.
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Anybody have any strong feelings about dethatching?
I take care of a few lawns on the side and I usually just aerate and overseed. I don't really think dethatching is necessary unless it's really built up. Aerating kind of helps the thatch break down anyway. Thinking of maybe using a slice seeder after aerating to kind of get work on thatch without actually dethatching. |
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Best yard care company in the KC area?
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So yeah, try pulling it backwards for a strip, or two, and see how much more thatch it'll pull up.. |
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The one time I dethatched it created a crazy amount to pick up. |
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And it's well worth it. Verticutting and aeration just aren't power raking. They are important, but they just aren't the same thing. Perhaps power rake then verticut. Make a weekend of it.. if you pull it backwards for the whole lawn, then rake/bag, if you can get out of bed on Sunday you'll be good to go to verticut. You can take M-W off from the gym! |
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Been a strange summer. All tomato plants got blight, hardly any leaves, sick ass looking plants. Made Salsa twice though.
Bell peppers and Jalepenos have been awesome. Fig trees are amazing. We will have at least a couple hundred juicy figs. Lettuce and kale made us grow tired of them. How about yours? Did you let it go to weeds once it warmed up?:D |
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I just picked up a new AreoGarden at an auction for half of list. I've been wanting one forever but was hoping the price would come don before I pulled the trigger. I can't wait for the fresh herbs
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Oh yeah, almost forgot. I snacked on my own home grown grapes while watching Mahomes light it up Thursday night.
They are small this second year, but have that conchord taste, but with seeds you have to spit out. Very happy and they should be better next year. |
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Here is my setup
or not. won't let me upload from my phone |
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I had a 2 year old grapevine this year and the grapes were super delicious but small and not many made if past the birds. I have Thompson Flameless seedless, which I love. What do you have your vine trellising on? I heard year 3 is great though! |
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She eats ANY plant that's alive in our house. Bring in a rose from the yard.....leaves ripped off and barf found around the house. Nice green house plant for the bathroom. Bark used as a scratching post and cat bite marks across all the leaves. Barf left around the house. ****ING WORTHLESS!!! |
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Not a bad year at all, but the same spot burnt out (because flights window reflection) and the same area under the deck tuned to mud (because the deck grew) so GloryDayz will be doing some serious flat work and not fighting mother nature any more.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk |
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I've had one for more than a decade now. Got one of the originals for Christmas. Parsley, thyme, and basil grow crazy good. The rosemary didn't do well at all. I've also had really good yield from their little pepper plants. I just bought one of their seed starter kits to use for next year's outdoor garden. |
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Pump replacements are like $12. |
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:thumb: Same thing here. Put it away for a couple years, just brought it back out 3-4 years ago. |
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We did put up corn last weekend. About 1/3 as much as last year, which was good. We got a little big for our britches last year and didn't get all of last years eaten. I finally got the hideous assed flowerbeds in front of the house fixed......ish. When we bought the house in Nov 14 it had these flowerbeds with these goddamned evergreen shitbushes. Dug all that shit out and put rocks in. Initially, there were 3 trees out front. Each planted in a raised bed. Well, some ****nut that lived here before cut one of the trees down. They went ahead and left the bed. OK whatever. So then they thought, WOW that was a good place for a tree. Let's plant one. So they moved over 5 feet and planted one. Not in a raised bed. Just ****ing there. :cuss: So we dug all the shit out of the old bed and moved it around the new one. We took a chance and put some dirt in there. There was a pretty good chance it would suffocate the trunk and it would die. Dug all the compost and bullshit out of there beds and put some different rocks in. Well shit. I thought I had some pictures. I'll try to grab one in the light. It's not great, but the wife and I are strictly interested in minimal maintenance. |
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Got the piers set over the weekend and they came and sat the house down yesterday. Happily, there was no damage (none that I've found, anyway) during the 16 mile move and placement. I'm pretty happy with the project at this point, though it's been a lot of work. I have no idea how far along it would be if I was still working full-time.
Having to clear about a quarter acre more back behind so they can get power to the house, but it's one step closer than it was to being home. Beyond adding an 8x12' dropped deck on the front, I'm still mulling the landscaping plan. I'm planning to toss out some rye in the next month to get some cover for the winter, at least. |
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