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Thread: Anyone do any gardening in here?

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    Senior Member Interpolation_Dawg_EX's Avatar
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    Anyone do any gardening in here?

    It's getting about that time to start seeds for next year's veggies. Anyone else grow their own plants for their garden? I've done it the last 2 years and have found it very rewarding. I do a variety of herbs, tomatoes, peppers, okra, cucumbers, zucchini, squash, strawberries, beans, and leafy greens like kale, lettuce, and greens. In the past, I've thrown together a grow station, but this year I bought a light fixture that I can raise and lower along with some heating pads to keep my soil warm in the garage. I'll post pics of my setup once I get it in place.

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    Senior Member SapperDawg's Avatar
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    We do. It has been a few years since I started seeds, as it seemed to take a LONG time. Last year I switched to heirloom tomato varieties, and they produced excellent results. This year I am looking at planting some vegetable guilds around some apple trees, herb garden, and then a salads garden. The guilds will have squash, running beans, tomatoes, peppers and some fragrant herbs mixed in with some ground cover.

    Also going to experiment with a small hoop style green house to get a jump on the growing season.

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    Senior Member Treemydawg's Avatar
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    We plant a big garden and usually get more food than we need. You can't beat the taste of fresh garden vegetables, but I have never started plants for my garden. I always plants the seeds in the garden early to mid march. Sounds like something that would be very rewarding.

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    Senior Member Interpolation_Dawg_EX's Avatar
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    Excellent, thanks for the response. Please excuse my long response.

    I do 3 tomatoes, all heirlooms...cherokee purple, texas wild cherry, and romas

    I've saved pepper seeds from different varieties over the last couple of years and order a few hybrids to supplement. That has worked pretty well and I had a nice production rate last year.

    I'm not familiar with a vegetable guild, but typically apple trees don't do well with competition around the root system. Have you ever heard of or constructed the 3 sisters garden? It consists of corn, squash, and beans that all help each other produce and grow? I'm going to try it out this year, but it's a proven technique.

    three sisters

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    Senior Member Interpolation_Dawg_EX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Treemydawg View Post
    I have never started plants for my garden. I always plants the seeds in the garden early to mid march. Sounds like something that would be very rewarding.
    I've always started my own herbs, but just recently started the seedlings. It's something to pass the time after deer season and football season has ended. The hardest part for me is thinning my seedlings. It's just so hard to see them grow from nothing to only throw them away. I try to to give away all that I don't use or try to use it for teaching kids about gardening.

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    I have had a lot of gardens but never started seedlings. Would like to see pictures when you get them.

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    Senior Member Interpolation_Dawg_EX's Avatar
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    A photo update of the grow box and seed pots:
    IMG_0936[1].jpg
    IMG_0943[1].jpg

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    Thanks. I may give that a try.

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    Senior Member BrunswickDawg's Avatar
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    I used to garden before I moved to the coast. My lot just has too much shade, and the soil is so sandy keeping things watered was next to impossible so I gave it up. I miss it. I had a 50' x 50' plot at my grandparents with better boy tomatoes, okra, squash, half-runners, zucchini, banana peppers, bell peppers, and cucumbers. I took it over from my grandfather after he passed - he had taught me everything as a kid. My Dad and I were planting that garden for him when he passed.

    Only thing I can pass along is if you fish, go out the weekend or so before you plant your tomatoes and save the heads, tails, etc. when you clean them. Throw some in each hole for the tomato plants. Best fertilizer you can get.

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    TheDynastyIsDead TUSK's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Interpolation_Dawg_EX View Post
    It's getting about that time to start seeds for next year's veggies. Anyone else grow their own plants for their garden? I've done it the last 2 years and have found it very rewarding. I do a variety of herbs, tomatoes, peppers, okra, cucumbers, zucchini, squash, strawberries, beans, and leafy greens like kale, lettuce, and greens. In the past, I've thrown together a grow station, but this year I bought a light fixture that I can raise and lower along with some heating pads to keep my soil warm in the garage. I'll post pics of my setup once I get it in place.
    since I was knee high to a grasshopper... various beans, peas, squashes, corn, tomatoes, egg plants, cabbage, lettuce, okra, alabama kush, cantaloupe, zucchini, cucumbers, watermelons, peaches, plums, grapes, apples, muscadines, vetch, peanuts, onions, carrots, peppers, etc... acres of it...

    Don't do it much anymore, but if ya have any issues, concerns, or questions, feel free to ping me...
    "It is not courage to resist TUSK; It is courage to accept TUSK."

    No.


    Easy there buddy. Tusk is...well Tusk is Tusk. Tireddawg 12.20.17

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    Senior Member BeardoMSU's Avatar
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    The lady and I love gardening. There is something so satisfying growing a plant from a seedling in a little sod puck, to pulling giant tomatoes and peppers off it a few months later. I'm addicted to it.

    These are a few pics from this past summer...
























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    Senior Member starkvegasdawg's Avatar
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    I badly want to do a garden this year, but right now my tiller is DOA and the last couple of times I have tried all I have ended up doing is creating a buffet for all the woodland critters. Maybe if I can get my tiller fixed I'll give it another try. But I will not be starting things from seeds. My thumb isn't that green. But i definitely agree with those that have said there is nothing better than eating fresh veggies out of your own garden. I know my mom has planters called earth boxes that are specifically made for growing vegetables. I may see if I can find some of those somewhere or something similar so I can keep them on my patio and maybe out of the mouths of hungry deer and raccoons.

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    Senior Member Uncivilengineer's Avatar
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    I plant a big garden every year. I still have veggies in the freezer from last year. I put up about 15 bags of okra, squash, butter beans, purple hull peas. and several quarts of pickled peppers and pickles.

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    Quote Originally Posted by starkvegasdawg View Post
    I badly want to do a garden this year, but right now my tiller is DOA and the last couple of times I have tried all I have ended up doing is creating a buffet for all the woodland critters. Maybe if I can get my tiller fixed I'll give it another try. But I will not be starting things from seeds. My thumb isn't that green. But i definitely agree with those that have said there is nothing better than eating fresh veggies out of your own garden. I know my mom has planters called earth boxes that are specifically made for growing vegetables. I may see if I can find some of those somewhere or something similar so I can keep them on my patio and maybe out of the mouths of hungry deer and raccoons.
    Definitely a problem. My brother in law lives in the country and he quit planting a garden because he said all he was doing was feeding the deer and raccoons.

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    Senior Member starkvegasdawg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Uncivilengineer View Post
    and several quarts of pickled peppers
    Your name Peter?

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    Senior Member Uncivilengineer's Avatar
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    Thats' what the ladies call me, ZING!!!!!!!!!

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    Senior Member Barking 13's Avatar
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    I am going to do bucket gardening this year, if I can find some reasonably priced buckets. $5 a bucket is a little steep. I need about 30-50. I plan to raise these on cinder blocks and timbers.
    cautiously optimistic

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    Senior Member starkvegasdawg's Avatar
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    I had some fried squash last night made from some squash I got from Kroger. It was almost sad. No comparison to the fresh grown stuff. This thread has convinced me I am going to have to do something this spring. I've heard you can spray malathion on your veggies to keep the critters away as they can't stand the smell and taste. It'll throw the organic label right out the window, but so long as I can get some veggies to eat I don't care.

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    Senior Member BeardoMSU's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by starkvegasdawg View Post
    I had some fried squash last night made from some squash I got from Kroger. It was almost sad. No comparison to the fresh grown stuff. This thread has convinced me I am going to have to do something this spring. I've heard you can spray malathion on your veggies to keep the critters away as they can't stand the smell and taste. It'll throw the organic label right out the window, but so long as I can get some veggies to eat I don't care.
    I plant a bunch of marigolds and basil plants throughout the garden to keep some of the bad bugs away; the smell they give off is a deterrent. I just put them in and around my tomato and squash plants. Works really well. Also, the marigolds attract pollinators, so that's another plus of having them around.

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    Senior Member starkvegasdawg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BeardoMSU View Post
    I plant a bunch of marigolds and basil plants throughout the garden to keep some of the bad bugs away; the smell they give off is a deterrent. I just put them in and around my tomato and squash plants. Works really well. Also, the marigolds attract pollinators, so that's another plus of having them around.
    I did not know that. Learn something new every day.

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