NEVER pay for something up front, ESPECIALLY from a friend or relative,
ask me how I learned this!
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NEVER pay for something up front, ESPECIALLY from a friend or relative,
What does signs if potassium and nitrogen stress in tomato plants look like?I leave the short stalk and the tomato roots in the ground until spring. Then they just come right out, no dragging a ton of soil with them.
Mine are starting to show signs of potassium and nitrogen stress, but it's too late to fix that now.
Plants going paleWhat does signs if potassium and nitrogen stress in tomato plants look like?
I have planted quite a few seeds the past few weeks and hardly anything is coming up compared to the amount of seeds grandson and I put out!
Mostly lettuces, kale, Swiss chard, radish.
Any clues as to why it wouldn't be coming up? We have gotten into the mid 50s at night this week. I've kept it watered well in between rains. Our highs have only been 85ish.
Wow Aaron, I needed that laugh. My father-in-law was sheepish once about not mowing his lawn for two weeks, said the neighbor made a comment. I told him he was just letting it go to seed to thicken up a bit was all!
Well y'all, the tomato plant that's been growing for months and months, and flowering for months with nothing to show for it, finally set some fruit. I counted 4. I think that means this particular variety won't produce if temps are above 95. Can't say I blame it. I won't work in that heat either!
Okra is a continually flowering / growing plant. it will grow, throw up an okra pod or two, grow some more, another pod, branch, throw up 2 pods, and keep slow growing like this, slow producing until it's shut down by frost typically at the end of the season or if it has grown a long long time, eventually just peters out. So yes you WILL fill that bag in the freezer. One note, Okra is MUCH better SMALLER over bigger. They will get woody and tough very fast, and even half a day to a day is enough to make the difference between a nice tender one and a tough one. I find about 3 to 4 inches is the best time to pick them. Use the thumbnail technique. Pinch it with your thumbnail, and twist, if it pinches mostly through and comes off nicely, you got it in time, if it's twisting like a piece of hemp rope and you need scissors, it may be a bit tough (perfect for okra, you simmer that tough out)Lol. Now if only the other cherry tomato would do the same. Peppers are flowering. The jalapeno is covered and so is one of the two pequins. Okra is getting ready to inundate me in a few more days here. Should finally fill that bag in the freezer. This whole time only four of my nine-ish plants have been producing. Now the others all have flowers and okra on them, and they've even put up large side branches that are as tall as the rest of the plant and blooming and setting pods. This might get hairy. Get it? 'Cause okra's fuzzy? Sorry I can't pass on a good pun, lol.
mine follow me on the lawn mower feasting in the flurry of critters that come out right after the mowerI pulled a bucket full of grass yesterday for the chickens. Trying to do that once a day. They like the grass and love any bugs that brings them. I limit actual weeding to once a week on the weekend, either in the morning or the evening.
Sweet potatoes absolutely LOVE water, as long as they are not standing in it they are happy with as much as you can give them. What I did that worked very well in the past is, outside the house, the pipe where the AC dumps the water at that it collects (if yours is set up that way) plant some right there. They get constant water from the AC, now throw some compost on them / around them once in a while and you will get monsters from them at the end of the growing season.The sweet potatoes I have left our there, really came to life this past couple of weeks now that temperatures have come down some and we've had some real rain.