Hi all,
Boots, first the plants have to grow. To answer your question: I don't know. I do know that I have not had a rhubarb pie for two years..
These plants will not be ready to pick until 2022.
I might sell every other plant. I might make another batch of wine..
yesterday I drilled two new holes in the mounting bracket. It was a tussle getting the pump separated from it. I did have to drain the hydraulic fluid. I put the bracket back onto the tractor. didn't have time to mount the pump before dark.
for the slugs: sprinkle finely ground up egg shells around your plants. Or sprinkle ashes around your plants.
bury a shallow pan, like a pie pan. make the top edge flush with the ground around it. put some beer into the pan.. .
...jiminwausau......
 
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I run the chickens in the garden, very few slugs. I have tomato cages made of old field fence. The bottoms are smaller space the adult chickens can't get in. I have landscape fabric down so they can't dig the roots Chipmunks and squirrels are still a problem. Out of 24 plants I get 2 to 6 a day that aren't chewed. Chickens get those and steal a few lower ones.
 
I haven't let the girls out of the run yet though that is the plan once the garden starts shutting down for the winter. I want them to have egg laying, where and when, settled before giving them a chance to hide their eggs in the yard. Pie and wine are both awesome options Jim, I so love rhubarb pie. Once I can start cutting my rhubarb I am for sure making pie. The snails and slugs are legion here, every morning I see them running as fast as they can from snacking all night on the potted plants before the sun hits them. It's a little better now, I put out some iron based slug and snail killer and it seems to have made a difference, but I lost so many tomatoes (and a few peppers) to them I don't take chances anymore.

We got 7 eggs this morning, 4 had thin shells but 2 of those were still whole if a bit dirty (still dropped on the poop boards) so the girls got those cooked up for a treat. For birds that were only "meh" about cooked eggs when they were little, they sure are crazed for them now. But 7 eggs in one day (and one more possibly, Glyness hasn't laid hers yet today), we will soon be foisting eggs on everyone we know. Sort of like zucchini.
 
I haven't let the girls out of the run yet though that is the plan once the garden starts shutting down for the winter. I want them to have egg laying, where and when, settled before giving them a chance to hide their eggs in the yard. Pie and wine are both awesome options Jim, I so love rhubarb pie. Once I can start cutting my rhubarb I am for sure making pie. The snails and slugs are legion here, every morning I see them running as fast as they can from snacking all night on the potted plants before the sun hits them. It's a little better now, I put out some iron based slug and snail killer and it seems to have made a difference, but I lost so many tomatoes (and a few peppers) to them I don't take chances anymore.

We got 7 eggs this morning, 4 had thin shells but 2 of those were still whole if a bit dirty (still dropped on the poop boards) so the girls got those cooked up for a treat. For birds that were only "meh" about cooked eggs when they were little, they sure are crazed for them now. But 7 eggs in one day (and one more possibly, Glyness hasn't laid hers yet today), we will soon be foisting eggs on everyone we know. Sort of like zucchini.
You could cook some and freeze them for later.
 
I finally got around to attaching another length of wire to the first one for the Serama run. Then darkness fell. I have been cleaning one of the coops and scrubbing the walls. Plan to spray all of them for insects and treat the birds. It's bad this time of year.
 

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