Hey everyone,
I've always tried to garden in Arizona (now I live in Miami, AZ which is at 3400 ft elevation and is generally much cooler than the lower desert). Starting from seed never works, they may germinate but as soon as I put them outside they shrivel up and die. Starting from nursery plants works for at most a couple of weeks, and then the plant keels over and dies, whether it's been transplanted outside (in the transplant-shock-proof containers) or still indoors. I've planted 2 fruit trees this spring, one of which seems okay for now, the other's leaves are drying up and getting crispy.
Even sprouting seeds- they are fine for day one, and then from then on they get moldy and infested in fruit flies. I wanted to grow fodder for my 18 chickens, but it just turns moldy, so I toss it in the compost.
Potatoes once in a while sprout up in my compost piles, but never actually grow more potatoes. It only ever keeps the original potato it grew from!
Am I doing something wrong?? Do I have a black thumb?? Do I need more shade? I feel like I water the plants enough, I doubt I water them too much, I water them in the morning to prevent the sun from frying the leaves during the day from the magnification of the water droplets. I've only had minimal luck growing plants in my unfinished compost piles; anywhere else and the plant just dies almost immediately.
There are about 10 pomegranate trees and 1 quince tree that were already on my property when I bought it, and they do fine without any maintenance, except the fruits crack open before they are ripe (I think that's from inconsistent watering).
Any tips from fellow desert gardeners would be so much appreciated! I need to grow some nice greens for my chickens and myself!
(I need to try to grow some banana trees, too- my chickens go bananas for bananas!)
I've always tried to garden in Arizona (now I live in Miami, AZ which is at 3400 ft elevation and is generally much cooler than the lower desert). Starting from seed never works, they may germinate but as soon as I put them outside they shrivel up and die. Starting from nursery plants works for at most a couple of weeks, and then the plant keels over and dies, whether it's been transplanted outside (in the transplant-shock-proof containers) or still indoors. I've planted 2 fruit trees this spring, one of which seems okay for now, the other's leaves are drying up and getting crispy.
Even sprouting seeds- they are fine for day one, and then from then on they get moldy and infested in fruit flies. I wanted to grow fodder for my 18 chickens, but it just turns moldy, so I toss it in the compost.
Potatoes once in a while sprout up in my compost piles, but never actually grow more potatoes. It only ever keeps the original potato it grew from!
Am I doing something wrong?? Do I have a black thumb?? Do I need more shade? I feel like I water the plants enough, I doubt I water them too much, I water them in the morning to prevent the sun from frying the leaves during the day from the magnification of the water droplets. I've only had minimal luck growing plants in my unfinished compost piles; anywhere else and the plant just dies almost immediately.
There are about 10 pomegranate trees and 1 quince tree that were already on my property when I bought it, and they do fine without any maintenance, except the fruits crack open before they are ripe (I think that's from inconsistent watering).
Any tips from fellow desert gardeners would be so much appreciated! I need to grow some nice greens for my chickens and myself!
(I need to try to grow some banana trees, too- my chickens go bananas for bananas!)