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|    rec.gardens.edible    |    Edible gardening topics    |    40,484 messages    |
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|    Message 39,860 of 40,484    |
|    songbird to fos@sdf.org    |
|    Re: What is the best way to supplement w    |
|    28 Jul 22 10:32:52    |
      From: songbird@anthive.com              fos@sdf.org wrote:       ...       > everything i have is growing well but i think there's much room for       > improvement, hence the soil testing. the only problem i'm having is       > a little powdery mildew on cucumbers and zucchini plants. also some on       > the passion flower vines. just noticed it and will be treating it with       > neem oil.               powdery mildew here is endemic, there's just way too many       other host plants around that i'll never be able to remove       or control so i've learned to live with it. most the times       it doesn't kill my entire harvest in any thing we grow -       it just doesn't look good when it happens.                     > critters i'm learning to live with. they're extraordinarily brutal this       > year due to the drought. everything is dry and brown except for those of       > us watering our gardens and it's attracting more critters than usual.               yes, that's been a large part of the problem. every animal       is hungry for some green and we're the supplier. recently       the road commission redid the road out front by spraying tar       and putting down gravel on top of that. the smell and change       may have been enough to get the three family deer (Momma and       two little ones) to stay away now and perhaps to break their       habit of coming by each night for easy goodies. the farm       fields around us are now grown up enough in corn that they       can hide in there all they want.                     > it's making for something interesting though. in my front yard around our       > flag pole we planted sunflower seeds. last year the only problem we       > had was robins pulling some seedlings out. we kept planting and       > prevailed. this year the woodchuck was getting at them. i took the 4       > survivors, two seedlings and two 18" tall plants that got mowed down,       > and transplanted them in the safety of the fenced veggie garden. the       > seedlings are growing fine. the two plants that got mowed down are       > mutants now. one is now growing 4 stems with growing buds, and the other       > sent a stem up from near the bottom off the side with a growing bud.       > will be interesting to see how they finish growing since they're not       > normal.               sunflowers grown here rarely make it above 2ft high and       repeatedly get mown down by the deer. more often the       seeds and seedlings are eaten by chipmunks, rabbits, etc.       i don't even try any more to grow them. sometimes if i've       been trapping a random seed might grow and even flower but       it isn't too likely unless they end up inside the fenced       gardens.                      songbird              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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