What did you do in the garden today?

The new bathroom has been cleaned.
The only thing left is putting up the barn door header, hanging the barn door, and installing the toilet roll holder, and doing the touch-up paint on the trim caulking.
I'm running out of steam.
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I transplanted two Giant Black winter melon, one Thai melon and one Kajari melon in my bed the other day. But I don't think the nylon trellis on top will be able to handle the weight of the melons. I will probably need to run more copper wires across to support them later. This is my first-time growing these varieties, so it will be a learning process.

I used this bed to decompose a lot of feathers from my chicken plucker when I processed my meat birds, and I read that Poultry feathers are rich with keratin protein and therefore they can be a good source of nitrogen fertilizer. I grew a Black Cherry tomato in this bed last year and it produced a lot of fruit, so I think it should be okay for melons.
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Mt okra look healthy in the morning, but in the late afternoon all of their leaves are drooping down like they are dying from sun stroke. It's been about a week since I transplanted them, and I had them in full sun while they were in 4-inch pots. However, I didn't let the potting mix dry out to harden them before I planted them in the ground. I am not sure if this step is necessary.

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Okra is very sun and heat tolerant, takes full sun and 100F plus temps and is more likely to wilt from excessive rain or watering or cold temps than heat. It has never missed a beat here even in past years when the temps were over 110 F with 80% humidity and in full July/August sun. They just keep on blooming and growing. New transplants can be a bit different if set out without acclimation(sounds like you did that) and not watered in to seal the air pockets around the roots. No matter how well the pots were watered new plantings need to be well watered in after planting. I would not worry over much about okra except when the weather is cold and frosty. Good luck!
 
I transplanted two Giant Black winter melon, one Thai melon and one Kajari melon in my bed the other day. But I don't think the nylon trellis on top will be able to handle the weight of the melons. I will probably need to run more copper wires across to support them later. This is my first-time growing these varieties, so it will be a learning process.

I used this bed to decompose a lot of feathers from my chicken plucker when I processed my meat birds, and I read that Poultry feathers are rich with keratin protein and therefore they can be a good source of nitrogen fertilizer. I grew a Black Cherry tomato in this bed last year and it produced a lot of fruit, so I think it should be okay for melons.
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I have never grown winter melons or many Asian melons, but will after seeing the Winter melon soup recipe. I have been growing many heirloom melons for fifty years, some years commercially for income. They love and thrive on lots of compost is my number one take away. I put a heaped five gallon bucket of good compost in each hill. They do very well here grown in mounds under mulch fabrics and thrive in hot weather with adequate soil moisture. I am a bit envious of your moderate weather in Hawaii, as extremes are the norm here. In my lifetime temps between , well below 0 degrees F and 116 F for highs. In the typical January, we may have 72 degree days and 15 degree days. In July/August we may have several weeks were the temps are near or over 100F everyday and no rain. My largest melon patches are grown on a low place in a valley of my property, below a a large pond (next door)and that has a water table only two or three feet deep. I have found that they do well without irrigation there grown in the mound method in even the hottest and driest summers. I love to hear about your growing varieties unfamiliar to me here in West Tennessee and your experiences there in Hawaii. Best wishes for your gardens!







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I miss working in a green house! I use to have access to using a green house at a nursery I was associated with. Now days , I just have my low tunnels and covered raised beds. If I come into some unexpected money I am going to build a green house! Been saying that for fifty years! The low tunnels are economical but my old back would appreciate standing up under the cover and being able to work them in bad weather. I use to grow an orange and a lemon tree in the greenhouse and I would like to do that again!
 
My okra looks healthy in the morning, but in the late afternoon all of their leaves are drooping down like they are dying from sun stroke. It's been about a week since I transplanted them, and I had them in full sun while they were in 4-inch pots. However, I didn't let the potting mix dry out to harden them before I planted them in the ground. I am not sure if this step is necessary.

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I have been trying to grow some cold hardy vegetables the greenhouse this winter. I have put very little effort into it just a test run to see if it is possible. I planted cauliflower, broccoli, kohlrabi and beets. The cauliflower never germinated but lots of weeds came up so i have been cutting the weeds every few weeks and feeding them to the chickens.

The other veggies are growing very slowly. The appear healthy but I don’t know if they will get to harvestable size before they get frost killed. Everything did get lightly frost damaged a few weeks ago when temperatures dropped to the high teens overnight.
I added a small milk house heater set to defrost mode. It kicks in when the temperature gets below 40 degrees to keep the frost from settling in. So far I haven’t noticed any significant increase in the electric bill so it must not run too often.

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Timing is everything! Figuring out the right time to start the seeds /transplants is key to winter gardening in a cold greenhouse or under row covers here. They have to be well started before the real cold weather arrives. You will figure it out and be successful! What you can grow successfully under cover that far north is the question. Some northern growers I know use row covers inside an unheated greenhouse or two layers of row covers in extreme weather all the way up in Vermont and Maine. I am not sure what they are successful with. I see collards, kales and even spinach and over wintering carrots mentioned sometimes. Your state AG. extension service should be able to help you with crop suggestions for your area. Very few seeds will germinate reliably in cold weather even in the fall before winter, so starts are the way to go on most unheated fall plantings, with some exceptions possibly.
 

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