I usually don't but it's been really dry this year so I've been watering them at least once a week. I think it's rained once in 2-3 weeks and just for an hour or two. It's easy to tell when plants need water when they start to wilt, but I have no idea how much the berries need. It's supposed to rain tomorrow and Monday, but if not I'm going to have to give then a lot of water.
Any tips for making an indoor greenhouse work? (I've blocked the central heat and air so it doesnt get much cool air, its warm but not as hot as outside)
The point of a greenhouse is to keep the environment warmer than outside
The point of a greenhouse is to keep the environment warmer than outside
that really doesn't sound like a good idea in Dallas, Tx in the summer with temps over 100
I wouldn't say its the only point either as I am trying to grow stuff that cant survive the heat of the summer and do the opposite in the winter. I've been able to keep basil, green onions & lemon balm year round but thats it so far
dill and thyme are what I really want to grow year round but I cant get dill to grow anywhere so far
I'm pretty sure the berries are waiting for you to leave for the day so they can ripen and let the wildlife get first pickings.
Yim,
Idk why but I find dill to be really difficult to grow. It pretty much only works a quarter of the time This of course makes me want to grow it even more. It's like it's read those PUA sites and is screwing with me
Idk why but I find dill to be really difficult to grow. It pretty much only works a quarter of the time This of course makes me want to grow it even more. It's like it's read those PUA sites and is screwing with me
glad I'm not alone, I can buy it at the farmers market and it looks fantastic, I gotta figure out how they pull it off.
Hopefully one of us will figure out how to do it soon
total noob garderner here. I started my first garden about 2 1/2 weeks ago (about 4-6 weeks to the planting party). I planted tomatoes, cucumbers, cantaloupe, jalapeno pepper, basil, cilantro and mint. When I planted the tomatoes plants, they were already 8-12 inches in height.
When should I start to see the the tomatoes start to bear fruit? Currently they are between 16-24 inches in height.
How about the cucumbers? They were about 6 inches in height when planted and now they are about 12 inches.
Finally the jalapeno plant, is currently about 24 inches tall. When should I start to see some peppers grow?
Any help/insight would be appreciated. For climate reference, I live in MN
For tomatoes it really depends on the variety and the amount of sun (should be getting minimum 6 hours a day). Early Girl are the quickest. I planted mine in mid-May so it's been about 8 weeks and they are about 5' high with a ton a fruit but none have ripened yet. Other "slicer" tomatoes take 2-3 weeks longer. I have a couple of varieties of cherry tomatoes also planted mid-May and they are producing some fruit.
Here's my out of control Super Sweet 100 cherry tomato that's about 6' 6" high and keeps growing
Here's my out of control Early Girl. It's in a 4' cage, but it's a foot above the cage and just spreading everywhere and I have to tie up more vines every couple of days.
We just had 4 chilli plants this year. We took the seeds from the best fruits from last year and sowed them. They grew so good, that we have to put them in the freezer, because we can't eat them fast enough. The pic is from what we have in the freezer now. We probably ate twice that amount the last ~4 weeks, and there's still more than that left on the plants now, that's still green.
live in Minneapolis, and was finally able to get my garden planted today (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and herbs). The vegetables I planted, the plants are about 2-3 inches. We are expected to get pretty heavy rains this weekend (2-3 inches). Will the plants hold up in all that rain?
I developed a product to help people get plants/to from the nursery by buckling them in, keeping your car floorboards clean and free of dirt, or if you are just a plant fanatic and want to keep one in your car for the fresh air/zen-like benefits. It's yourplantbuddy.com. Just recently went live and could use any feedback, as it's very much a work in progress. Hope someone likes it!
I developed a product to help people get plants/to from the nursery by buckling them in, keeping your car floorboards clean and free of dirt, or if you are just a plant fanatic and want to keep one in your car for the fresh air/zen-like benefits. It's yourplantbuddy.com. Just recently went live and could use any feedback, as it's very much a work in progress. Hope someone likes it!
At first when I saw the picture and you said protect your buds thought you where promoting growing weed in your car. I was like wow things have gotten very progressive.
Is the intention just to transport plants in your car or to actually keep and grow plants in your car? I admit transporting plants in a car is a huge hassle, they tend to tip over. However how many people transport plants often enough in there car that they would need this product?
Peppers starting to come in. Based on the size / shape / length I think these are paprika (I didn't label where I planted the peppers so not 100% sure).
Poppys blooming like crazy but without any breeze they do not support their own weight, so I have weird creeping poppy flowers across the floor
Snapdragons on the other hand grow strong and incredibly fast. They're 4+ feet tall and show no sign of stopping.
Office garden update (all 3 are various pepper varieties)
Wow, all your gardens look great. I tried to grow some veggies at my backyard but had no luck. Eventually, it all ended like this
At least the backyard looks fine. My friend advised me to get a fertilizer spreader like this* next time. Maybe next year I'll try to grow vegetables again.
Last edited by Mike Haven; 11-12-2019 at 09:19 AM.
Reason: * Spam link removed