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Gardenhacker.com – Tips and Tricks for Busy Gardeners https://gardenhacker.scrimshaw.com/ |
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King Harry Potato Harvest Results Come in Mixed https://gardenhacker.scrimshaw.com/king-harry-potato-harvest-begins/ |
Quick, Weedless Garden Path (Recyclable!) https://gardenhacker.scrimshaw.com/quick-weedless-garden-path-recyclable/ |
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↓|| || Home 30 Minutes A Hidden World About Blight Info Books Contact Find Us GardenHacker Gauges Indoor Indoor Salad Garden Indoor Strawberries Invasive Species Japanese Knotweed Purple Smoke Bush Outdoor Wicking Bed It works down under, can it work here too? Privacy Policy Recipes Roadside Seed Suppliers Blog Penny Pincher’s Slug Solution Myth Busted? Posted on June 7, 2016 by admin Posted in FYI Heard of a solution to our slug problem: surround your prized plants with a circle of pennies to keep the slugs away. For pennies you can keep those slimy suckers at bay! Worth a try. The thought is that slugs get a shock” when they touch the copper and dislike it so they find greener pastures. The result? Corporate slug? Maybe wheat pennies will work better. Maybe a trip to the local Rent-a-Duck”? Maybe some well placed slug pellets! Tagged with: hack myth busted Sweet Tomatoes Posted on May 22, 2016 by admin Posted in Fertilizing , FYI , Soil You can sweeten your tomatoes on the vine by using a little less than 1/4 cup of baking soda and sprinkling it around your tomato plant. Test your soil first – if it’s already alkaline (a pH above 7.0), this could harm your plant. Test on one plant first – give the test plant about two weeks and note any differences. If it’s doing well, proceed to do this to the rest of the plants a little less than 1/4 cup about 2″ away from the stem when you’ve transplanted the plant once again when the plant is about 1/2 grown This neutralizes the acids in the soil, bringing the pH higher. This also works when you’re canning the tomatoes, sweetening the tomatoes without adding extra calories (use 1 tsp per 20 tomatoes). Too much baking soda will alter the flavor. Also, skim any foam that rises to the top. Open Source Seed Initiative Posted on May 21, 2016 by admin Posted in FYI What’s better than an unbirthday? An unpatent! The Open Source Seed Initiative breeds varieties of vegetables that are unpatentable – open source, free from litigation. A hack? Yes – on a long-range scale. There was a time when patenting seeds was a good thing: plant breeders weren’t able to profit from their hard work until they were able to patent their varieties. Now that we’re in the 21st century, it’s time for the pendulum to swing back for the home and small-scale gardeners and farmers so they may make a living and create new varieties. This is especially important with the climate so unpredictable. Many partners have joined in the OSS, including High Mowing Seeds, Oiko’s Tree Crops, and many others. You can click on the links on the page to go to their site. OSS Partners The 27 Minute Gardener is Available in Hard Copy Posted on May 8, 2016 by admin Posted in 30 Min. , FYI , Time The 27 Minute Gardener, available on Kindle, is now available in hard cover via CreateSpace ( https://www.createspace.com/6187698 ). Available soon from Amazon.com as well. You can follow my daily blogs as I follow the book, gardening in only 27 minutes per day. Written for a couple of reasons, the book shows you step by step how you can create a bountiful garden in less than 1/2 hour per day – a sliver of time in your busy day. Keyhole Gardening Hack Posted on May 8, 2016 by admin Posted in Hugelkultur , Raised Bed , Tangents Great for arid climates, this keyhole gardening article sums it up nicely. Don’t know if it would work in the sopping wet northeast, but I love the idea! Looking at the side-view cutout it reminds me of a hugelkultur bed where you bury logs covered by the branches covered by the leaves covered by garden soil. The compost basket in the center would speed the decay of the materials at the bottom, bringing both moisture and nutrients to the sub-soil biology. Oh, and let the birds do their business right into the bin as well. http://www.texascooppower.com/texas-stories/nature-outdoors/keyhole-gardening From Texas Co-op Power Garden Map Hack Posted on May 1, 2016 by admin Posted in 30 Min. , FYI There are many ways to mark what’s supposed to be growing where in your garden. They often become faded, knocked over or hidden by your vegetables. The best solution is to create a map of your garden. A simple sketch to a spreadsheet, you’ll find they come in very handy when you’re in the thick of it. What were you going to plant next? Did I plant this in the same spot last year? What should I grow here next? There are a lot of online gardening maps available, from gardener’s supply ‘s free site to paid for sites like the one on Almanac.com and others. They can all help you plan, especially on raw windy days. The Hack: Create your own map to print out and modify as you need. You can do this in a spreadsheet program such as Excel, or you can create one on google sheets. The important information includes the plant family, start date, specific name, days to maturity, and when your harvest date is. I also include what I’m planting next since I do succession gardening (plant, harvest, plant again in the same location). Even easier: here’s a link to a google sheet already created. Simply save to your google drive and adjust as necessary. There are two sheets: the first is an example 3×3 garden, the second is a list of plant families for crop rotation. If you don’t grow one of the families, skip to the next one. The harvest date appears automatically (so don’t worry – you don’t have to wait until Dec. 30 to harvest!). Here’s the link: Garden Planner on Google Sheets There is also an excel spreadsheet available here: Garden Planner (via 27 Minute Gardener) Grocery Bag Weed Block Hack Posted on April 30, 2016 by admin Posted in 30 Min. Back to blogging, though mostly on the 27minutegardener.com” site – I’ll be putting quick and easy hacks here that I’ve used or find interesting. This is one of the easiest (and free) hacks for supressing weeds. Cut the bottom off of a paper grocery bag Split the bag at the seam Cut it in half lengthwise Fold accordion style so you have 2″ panels Cut a half a hole on the folded edge in the center You now have approximately six holes in a strip of thick paper to plant your plants! You can fold it with wider or narrower panels to make the holes closer or further apart, cut two holes on one side and one on the other to create a staggered planting pattern, or just lay the strips down on either side of a row to keep the weeds down. Quick, Weedless Garden Path (Recyclable!) Posted on April 22, 2016 by admin Posted in 30 Min. Raked path with weeds already growing Paths are necessary to get to your vegetables. Some gardeners plant in rows leaving the paths as grass and mowing it. Others will create paths laying down sand, weed blocking cloth, then brick or stone. Which way is the best way? It really depends on how permanent your garden is, and how much time you want to spend on the paths versus your garden. Paper bags, split and laid down overlapping the edges. So why make paths at all? The path should make itself” – the well trodden area finally succumbing to the compressed earth. That would be okay, except for the weeds. The weeds will grow any place they can. Even the tightest laid brick walks will have little spots of green where a seed has slipped in between or a root has reached through enough of a crack underneath to sprout and grow. Blacktop? Aside from being extreme, anyone who has a blacktop driveway knows the same thing happens there, too – and who wants the smell (and the chemicals) in their garden? Wood chips raked back over. Good night weeds! One simple solution is to lay down a biodegradable weed block, then cover it with wood chips or other compostable material. As stated above, weeds will find a way, so why not make it easier for yourself, minimize the time you spend and actually get a reward at the end of the season? Level your paths if they aren’t already, and remove any larger clumps of grass that have already started Using 5-10 thicknesses of newspaper per or one grocery bag soaked and split apart, cover the area,...
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