We are actually transitioning out of dairy for good.can you switch to goats?
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We are actually transitioning out of dairy for good.can you switch to goats?
You are so right! Last year I quit buying senior feed for my horses when it went up from $19.99 to $27.99 for a 50# bag, so I did a bunch of math to mix basic ingredients plus vitamins to provide the same nutrition and saved money for a while. Now it's all gone up yet again! It's ridiculous that chicken scratch is $15, same as layer pellets.Animal feed has skyrocketed. Our horse food is now $30/bag. It was about $21-$22 just a year ago. Alfalfa pellets are $18.
We have grown luffa gourds and other gourds.I still need to do a survey of my seeds and figure out what I need to order, but one thing I do know for sure, is I need to order luffa seeds and give them another try after failing for the past two years.
So, everyone who's grown luffas, please give me all your advice!
I have a trellis I built for them, with a 2'x3' raised bed on each side, how should I prepare the beds? Do they like acid, alkaline or neutral soil? Our typical last frost date is mid-April, should I start seeds outside then, or start them inside earlier and plant them outside then? Or start them inside, transfer them to the unheated, slightly insulated greenhouse when they are a certain size, and wait to transplant them outside?
We typically get a ton of rain in the spring, how big do they need to be to tolerate soaking? Then we get a dry heat wave in the summer (at least for the past couple years we have) should I wait to plant them out until the dry season?
I am determined to finally grow some luffas this year - trying to plan ahead and get their conditions right with help from you all - I am tired of paying through the nose for stupid, wasteful plastic sponges that just get thrown away when there's a better alternative I can potentially grow myself.
I DO NOT miss those days of two a day milkings. Nope nope nope.A small dairy farm is 300 cows milking, we have 65 milking cows on grass and not in confinement. Small dairies consider us to be a hobby farm.We have no employees and do everything ourselves.
None here either. Ick.I don't have it. unfortunately I don't like it.
Shove them in the ground and hope you can run fast enough to get away from them.I still need to do a survey of my seeds and figure out what I need to order, but one thing I do know for sure, is I need to order luffa seeds and give them another try after failing for the past two years.
So, everyone who's grown luffas, please give me all your advice!
I have a trellis I built for them, with a 2'x3' raised bed on each side, how should I prepare the beds? Do they like acid, alkaline or neutral soil? Our typical last frost date is mid-April, should I start seeds outside then, or start them inside earlier and plant them outside then? Or start them inside, transfer them to the unheated, slightly insulated greenhouse when they are a certain size, and wait to transplant them outside?
We typically get a ton of rain in the spring, how big do they need to be to tolerate soaking? Then we get a dry heat wave in the summer (at least for the past couple years we have) should I wait to plant them out until the dry season?
I am determined to finally grow some luffas this year - trying to plan ahead and get their conditions right with help from you all - I am tired of paying through the nose for stupid, wasteful plastic sponges that just get thrown away when there's a better alternative I can potentially grow myself.
I've gotten really picky with my scratch grains.You are so right! Last year I quit buying senior feed for my horses when it went up from $19.99 to $27.99 for a 50# bag, so I did a bunch of math to mix basic ingredients plus vitamins to provide the same nutrition and saved money for a while. Now it's all gone up yet again! It's ridiculous that chicken scratch is $15, same as layer pellets.