Garden Category
February 6th, 2012 by GuysGuideBook in Garden
I didn’t do any winter crops this year so there isn’t to much activity around the garden. I just finished cleaning all the hop hills including moving three hops from their existing hill to a new hill that double stacks the hops. I won’t add any replacement hops this year but this gives me room to add 3 additional varieties next year. I’ll also add another series of each of the hops that I had on the west side.
As with each of the last three years, I purchased a bundle of asparagus a week ago. As with each of the last three years, I told myself I need to put these in the ground today before leaving the store. As with previous years, by the time I got home, I had other stuff to do and set them aside. This year we got a great weather weekend and I planted them into the ground one week after I purchased them. We might have a shot at fresh asparagus this year.
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December 28th, 2011 by GuysGuideBook in Garden
As December closes, I took time to clean up the hops. I’d left a bit of each vine with the intention of trying to clone them to give away. Things got rushed with the rest of the tomatoes and they never got buried. Now they are just dead vines with no use.
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June 27th, 2011 by admin in Garden
It’s a great day when you find your first tomatoes of the seasons on the vine. Green of course but it’s a start. The tomato plants are all around knee high and starting to climb the wire fences. The first raspberry is already eaten. Even the Peppers are showing up.
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June 5th, 2011 by admin in Garden
With the tomatoes and eggplants out of the greenhouse and in the ground it’s time to clear the last bit of room in the garden that the greenhouse has been filling for the last three months. The greenhouse is a pretty simple setup with metal 1 inch poles and a cover that goes over the whole thing. It came down easily but created a challenge of how to clean and store the cover for the summer.
For now the poles are in an extra trash can tied together with the small parts in the bottom of the can. The cover should be rolled up soon and joining it for summer storage.
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June 4th, 2011 by admin in Garden
It’s really bad when a sales man tells you you’ve got a problem. We lost one tomato plant in the last week. A Carbon (black) tomato plant. It was something that my wife had picked up at the spring growers event in May. She found the card and knew where it was from but hadn’t had luck with initial contacts.
We were in Jackson ville this morning at the weekend market and a vendor had some tomato starts. When she mentioned the carbon, the grower hadn’t heard of it. It came up that losing one of 42 wasn’t that bad at which point the grower replied back “You’ve got a problem”
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May 29th, 2011 by admin in Garden
Busy day. Now that the rototiller is working and most of the garden is tilled it was time to plant! Tomatoes first and then eggplants. About 35 tomato starts are in the ground. This year we took a different approach. Previously we tied two 52″ cattle panels together with twine at the top then leaned them together. This gave us frames that were about 4 feet 6 inches tall.
This year we picked up 7 foot T posts from the Grange Co Op and mounted a single panel between two of the posts. This gives us the full 5 foot panel to grow on and by putting it 8 to 12 inches off the ground gives us much more room at the top to tie the tomatoes to.
Looking forward to another great year
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May 28th, 2011 by admin in Garden, Home Improvement
The rototiller I have is many years old. I’m not sure how old but it was manufactured in Europe (BCS) and apparently the company has updated all their designs from this model. It’s a great rototiller when it starts but when it doesn’t, well it’s a pain. I finally figured out the exact starting order and dealt with the reason it would be hard to start.
First, the pull start didn’t always retract. This makes it really hard to start when you can only get a half pull. It also means you are pulling really hard and doing damage to the cord. I pulled a few times to many and another strand of metal broke loose. One pull after that, the whole cable broke.
Stopping by the small engine repair shop for a few parts and the counter worker hadn’t ever heard of metal wires for starter cables. After several assurances that even though it was a hard start the nylon rope would work just fine I took it home and spent a few hours pulling the starter assembly apart, cleaning it and putting it back together.
The first pull resulted in the rope slipping through the handle and back into the starter housing. 20 minutes of break down and put back together later I pulled again. The first pull broke the rope. I tried a number of items including an impact wrench with a belt for a car. After that attempt I noticed the notch on the wheel and it reminded me that they used to have a notch so you could put a rope with a knot into the notch, wrap it a few times and then give it a yank. It worked perfectly.
That left one problem which was that even on a great pull it wouldn’t turn over. I noticed that the deadman switch had a bit of slack. Tightening that up made it start on the first time almost every time. Now it’s a fun rototiller to use.
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March 22nd, 2011 by admin in Garden
I added more corn and and added a second set of starts today. The first batch were transplanted up to 4″ containers today to make room on the peat tray.
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March 10th, 2011 by admin in Garden, Uncategorized
I’m starting the first batch of seeds this week. Corn, tomatoes, and squash. They are in the small peat holders that come in their own tray. The exception is the corn. It is in a 6 pack container to avoid having to transplant it so quickly.
I’m going to use the Garden category to track all the different work this year to get the garden ready and comment on when I should have done things as opposed to when I did to help next year.
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