Does anyone have any homemade recipes for natural or herbal sprays for
vegetables? I would of used 7 dust, but there are now children living next
door to me, and we have stray cats.
Archive for June, 2009
Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
Monday, June 29th, 2009
I’m having aphids on my eggplants. And same thing, APPEARED to get rid of them one day, back the next. I was using an insecticidal soap but after I thought about it, realized that diatemaceous earth would be better, and it has been. They still seem to be flocking to the new leaves without DE and with the rain, it washed off most of the DE but it’s still helping. I noticed that I am getting lady bugs now. They love to eat aphids and I love to see them. When I spotted some more lady bugs today I checked out their feasting and noticed new aphids. I’m just going to reapply the DE. It seems to be the most helpful. In Master Gardener School, we learned that aphids hitch a ride from ants onto plants and my eggplants had ants abundant on them.
Hi All,
I have three SWCs of assorted salad greens including spinach and
arugula that I seeded on April 24th. For the past several weeks, I’ve
been harvesting and enjoying a bowlful of baby greens every day -
except for one thing: I’m finding small green aphids on some of the
greens in all the containers. Ack! I get rid of them every time I
see them, but the next day there are more.
I can’t figure out where the little buggers are coming from. The
containers were all brand new (from Gardener’s Supply) and I used
fresh potting mix. They are on a table in my backyard patio.
I’m doubly frustrated because the same thing happened this past winter
when I was growing greens in different containers indoors under
lights. Only those aphids were brown and just targeted the arugula
and asian greens. These green aphids seem to like it all – romaine,
gourmet mix, etc., and they are harder to spot because they are the
same color as the greens.
Anyone else having the same problem? Any ideas where they came from?
Container Growing
Tuesday, June 16th, 2009- I bought a bag of Miracle-Grow organic fertilizer this year and it is just chicken manure, lots of nitrogen. Be careful with it. We had a big hoo-hah about Miracle-Grow on Tomatomania recently and I was a bit of devil’s advocate. Some people really flamed me. I am well aware of the damage that chemical fertilizers do, but I think the key word is moderation. There are times a little chemical fertilizer does good, and I know of no evidence that in small quantities it does any harm. In general organic methods are much better from the standpoint of nutrition and the environment but if you add a teaspoon of miracle grow to a gallon of water and put it on your seedlings when you set them out, or use miracle-grow potting soil in your containers, you are not murdering the earth, IMO. Now factory farms that use chemical fertilizers, insecticides and herbicides indiscriminately and literally by the ton, that’s another story. But I doubt that many people on this list are farming 1000 acres.
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I’ve got a couple of green pepper plants in a pot. But I’ve noticed that the only peppers being produced are really small and misshapen. I’ve never tried peppers before, so I’m not sure if it’s the way the first fruits look, or if I need to pull them off, or let it go, or what.
We’re growing gaint marconi peppers for the first time this year. They first appear wadded up, almost like a spit ball, than straighten and lengthen as they grow, eventually ending up looking like proper peppers. My other pepper varities don’t go through this ‘ugly duckling’ stage. Since they are getting identical care, I’m chalking it up to the type of pepper for now.
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Hello everybody, I am new to this group and to container growing. I have managed to get a few large ex food containers from local restaurants, and have some tomato plants which are ready to plant up. The containers are quite large, 15 litre or about 4 US gallon. They are food grade plastic I think were used for cooking oil. I have scrubbed them all out.
1. What size holes and where (sides & bottom?) should I drill into my containers? And at the risk of sounding like an idiot, what drill bit should I use???
2. I have some French marigolds that I would like to plant with the toms, has anyone found this effective for pest control?
3. How many tomato plants to a pot of that size? Just one seems to be recommended by most sites.
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I assume you are just using the containers as a regular pot and not as a self watering container, correct?
If so, you might want to stop a minute and think about making it a self watering container (see the files section). I made my first batch out of buckets a few weeks ago and it was not nearly as difficult as I was afraid it would be. I think you should consider this option first as it will make a big difference in where you drill.
If you don’t want to make a self watering container, the holes should go on the bottom. I make my holes with the 1/4 inch bit but if I were going to do it again, I’d probably go up to the 1/2 inch. It doesn’t take a lot of room for water to flow out so I erred on the side of making them small.
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My 2 cents – drainage holes should be slightly smaller than a pencil – for a bucket that size I would put 6 holes on the bottom and 4 holes on the side about a half inch up from the bottom. Only 1 plant per container of that size -at least for a tomato. Marigolds I have no idea.
Hello everybody, I am new to this group and to container growing. I have managed to get a few large ex food containers from local restaurants, and have some tomato plants which are ready to plant up. The containers are quite large, 15 litre or about 4 US gallon. They are food grade plastic I think were used for cooking oil. I have scrubbed them all out.
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I have 6 sweet peppers, the Italian horn type, planted in 5 gallon buckets. Since the pepper’s roots did not need all of the potting mix in the bucket last year, and I had 15 big bags of shredded mulch from the Boy Scouts on hand, I put a few inched of shredded mulch on top of stones in the bottom of the buckets. Then potting mix and peppers, and after a few weeks a little mulch on top.
The peppers started well and looked great for a couple weeks.
Then I was out of town for 10 days, it rained most days and I asked a relative to water every day that there was not rain.
When I came back, the peppers looked ‘unhappy’ and started dropping leaves. I resumed the watering, the peppers are blooming and even a small pepper on one plant. They continued to look ‘unhappy.’I decided to repot them, perhaps the mulch was the problem.
The mulch in some pots was growing tiny mushrooms and some pots had a white fibrous material.I used all new potting mix, removed all the mulch, kept the biggest root mass that I could.
I had potted eggplants the same way, they are a bit yellow and small, little growth, so I repotted them too.Lesson learned: do not use mulch to fill in a too big pot.
2nd lesson: peppers and eggplants do not like shredded mulch.My tomatoes look great, almost explosive growth, they did not have any mulch. This is my second year of growing tomatoes, peppers and eggplants in 5 gallon buckets.
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Tue Jun 16, 2009 10:04 am (PDT)
Ok the mulch is most likely not the problem. It sounds like they need nutrition. So start feeding them. Once they start producing fruit they need to be feed more often. You know when you see that a tomato plant will produce 20 lbs or what ever of fruit a year and you don’t get what they claim. It is because we don’t feed enough. Also with all that watering or rain while you were gone nutrients were being washed away.
That white web stuff on the mulch is actually good fungus. And the mushrooms indicate to much water. At least your plants did not die while you were gone. Looks like your relative did a really good job of watering.
Then I was out of town for 10 days, it rained most days and I asked a relative to water every day that there was not rain.
When I came back, the peppers looked ‘unhappy’ and started dropping leaves. I resumed the watering, the peppers are blooming and even a small pepper on one plant. They continued to look ‘unhappy.’I decided to repot them, perhaps the mulch was the problem.
The mulch in some pots was growing tiny mushrooms and some pots had a white fibrous material.
y question for the group is: should I abandon these peppers and start with new plants, if I can find new pepper plants? Or do you think that the peppers and eggplants will recover?Lesson learned: do not use mulch to fill in a too big pot.
2nd lesson: peppers and eggplants do not like shredded mulch.My tomatoes look great, almost explosive growth, they did not have any mulch. This is my second year of growing tomatoes, peppers and eggplants in 5 gallon buckets.
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Protecting Seedlings
Tuesday, June 16th, 2009I have planted a garden for the first time in many years this year. Hubby made me two raised beds ( 4X8) and we had 4 tons of dirt delivered It was not the best but not the worst either. Got some peat moss and coffee grounds worked into it and that really helped. Any way I planted a number of tomato plants that we started which bugs immediatly began to eat.
I also planted some purchased tomato plants which the bugs did not even touch!
Anyway, my tip is this, we cut the tops and bottoms off of 16 oz water bottles and used the resulting sleeves to protect our ( replanted) seedlings, and they worked GREAT. Nothing ate them, and they grew really well. When they got big enough, we just slid the collars off of them. I saved them in a bag hanging from basement rafters for next season. Now that our garden is growing great guns, we have had to fence it, the bugs have found other things appealing in there. They manage to pull the radishes up nightly, not to eat, just to pull up and lay in rows. It is the oddest thing I have ever seen, they are pulled and neatly laid in a row just as they grew! Ay guesses what is doing it? I think it is a squirrel, or rabbits.
Growing Potatoes In Tires
Friday, June 12th, 2009Ever thought of growing potatoes in tires.
Fill the first tire with compost and put you seed potatoes on the surface of the compost. The roots will grow down into the compost. Put another tire on top and partially fill with wood chips or sawdust. As the potato plants grow about 8″ above the surface, add a bit more sawdust or wood chips. When the tire is full add another tire up to 4.
Why the sawdust or wood chips? Your potato crop will form above the seed potatoes and will not have any dirt on them. You don’t have to wash them.
Why Container Growing
Thursday, June 11th, 2009Container growing is convenient for the elderly or the disabled who need easier access to up keep their gardens. Container growing can be done on patio tabletops, ledges, over the edge of a balcony and even on steps. This process can be very decorative as well.
Container growing can be done in shop bought containers or homemade containers. I like to go to garage sales and find some unusual items to grow plants in. My front garden has very poor soil for planting delicate flowers. So I leave that soil to my hardier plants like bushes and broad leaf plants. I discovered an old washtub at a garage sale one day and incorporated this into my garden for my flowers.
I simply drilled several holes into the bottom of the tub, then put in about an inch of stones to semi cover the holes so as not to lose too much of the soil. Then came the soil. This will depend on what you are going to plant.
All Purpose Mixture
2 parts good garden loam
1 part sand
1 part peat moss or other humus
1-teaspoon bone meal for each 5-inch
pot of mixture
I plant most of my garden varieties using this mixture.
If I plant in an area where there is a busy activity of bugs I will place a piece of window screening under the container as this seems to slow down their attack and it gives me a chance to combat their activities. By placing the screening under the container it holds the screening tightly to the container, as the weight of the earth inside pushes down. This way it is harder for grubs and slugs to get around the screening, a very handy tool.
Other ideas to name a few are, old watering cans, (these too can be found in garage sales), and coffee cans decorated by your children, which is a fun project for a rainy day. For this I give it a spray with any kind of craft sealant good for outdoors, or simply use these inside. Container growing can be fun and quite rewarding.
Tomatoes and other vegetables are a big thing with container growing .
While the men obsess over their lawns, the women have more important things on our minds, like growing our own food.
Many aspects of growing veggies are the same no matter your location. Here we are passing on to you are successes and secrets of gardening. We hope you will enjoy this as much as we have creating it. We will post how the the containers are progressing, so watch and grow with us. We would love to have you in our cyber garden space.
Please visit us often. And of course we would love your contibution to this blog.
you can email us at: contact@ContainerVegGrowing.com