whatcha gonna plant in em?we can plant into them.
We’ve had a couple days of rain
This is what I deal with here, this is the tater and bean patch, the only ones happy with it are our ducks
whatcha gonna plant in em?we can plant into them.
We’ve had a couple days of rain
In the new bales (see link below on the recipe), which are in previous post/pics, we’ll plant: Squash, cucumbers, zuchini,kombucha (Japanese pumpkin) butternut, spaghetti, pie pumpkins.whatcha gonna plant in em?
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This is what I deal with here, this is the tater and bean patch, the only ones happy with it are our ducks
Thanks for the link - - answered all my questions about the straw bales.In the new bales (see link below on the recipe), which are in previous post/pics, we’ll plant: Squash, cucumbers, zuchini,kombucha (Japanese pumpkin) butternut, spaghetti, pie pumpkins.
In last years bales, this year we’ll plant: carrots, kale, beets, chard.
As far as your water feature (fountain would be a nice touch ) there, it looks like you need a canoe to do your gardening! We’ve had a close to 4” rain past few days, more this evening, and snow tomorrow. In the flats and valleys here it looks much the same as your tater patch.
https://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheet/straw-bale-gardening/
speaking of ducks just hanging outthe only ones happy with it are our ducks
We just tried the bales for first time last year…the unwritten benefit is no, I repeat no weeds…that portion is awesome and the productivity exceeded expectations. It did require additional watering IMO but I have no way to prove other than knowing I stood out there and watered quite a bit (we did have some dry spells too). The no weeding was huge. When we move I will put bales into my raised beds and just keep piling it in at is breakdown vs buying soil I think. The raised bed in the edge of the one pic we built that like a Hugul mound…if I knew how the straw would work I think I would have just put bales on the tops of the dead tree branches and wood chips rather than buy soil…it’s expensive to have a dump truck of soil delivered here so I think the straw is much cheaper and the organic matter adds a lot of material into the soil we have, so I am trying that rather than buying soil since our time is sort of limited.Thanks for the link - - answered all my questions about the straw bales.
I've had some issue getting straw when I've done lawn seeding in central NYS.
Doubt that's a concern in Ohio?
Could you share more about the fishing line fence? Any pics?onions started under lights in Feb with parsley. All in garden now. Tomatoes, peppers box choi lettuce all in greenhouse.Use fishing line for deer fence (15 years). www.nunamakerfarms.com
I use 2 strands of braided electric fence at 8 and 13 inches (little critters). Then I use 4 strands of 20-40 lb monofilament nylon fishing line spaced evenly to 7 feet. Pictures are not helpful since the fence is almost invisible. Deer don't see it at night and get tangled in it. May have to repair it several time until the deer learn that it is there and then not much maintenance. Cheap fence that doesn't look bad, See it when the sun reflects on it at times. Deer rarely get in. We have a big deer herd -often see 7 at a time.Could you share more about the fishing line fence? Any pics?
I just LOVE to see the life that you have created for your children!
Thank you my friend!I just LOVE to see the life that you have created for your children!
Have you ever thought about moving your tater patch to that high spot on far bank?whatcha gonna plant in em?
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This is what I deal with here, this is the tater and bean patch, the only ones happy with it are our ducks
Love the picture of your son “ducking" around! My younger daughter had a similar situation going on with one of the four geese that they raised from gosling that were delivered by the US mail. He was gentle with her and aggressive to everybody else.
My son wants geese but it ain’t happening. The ducks are pretty fun though, they are kinda like dogs . They love the kidsLove the picture of your son “ducking" around! My younger daughter had a similar situation going on with one of the four geese that they raised from gosling that were delivered by the US mail. He was gentle with her and aggressive to everybody else.
I have a picture somewhere of my wife out in the rain with an umbrella, walking the four little goslings around so they could eat some fresh grass in the rain while being protected by "Mother Goose"…
Your ground looks a lot like mineOur garden space will pretty much be the same as last year. Veggies will be shuffled around.
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Those drakes must be having a GOOD time!
We also use those red blinking lights which are supposed to scare critters away. I can see the light gets distorted by the monofilament. the deer avoid; we don't have deer entanglement problems.I use 2 strands of braided electric fence at 8 and 13 inches (little critters). Then I use 4 strands of 20-40 lb monofilament nylon fishing line spaced evenly to 7 feet. Pictures are not helpful since the fence is almost invisible. Deer don't see it at night and get tangled in it. May have to repair it several time until the deer learn that it is there and then not much maintenance. Cheap fence that doesn't look bad, See it when the sun reflects on it at times. Deer rarely get in. We have a big deer herd -often see 7 at a time.