indeed! There are excellent ones at small farmers markets in LA. That's how I got the first seeds =)
those pumpkin cross breeds are dangerous. They produce certain poisons that were eliminated when breeding the genuine sorts. The same can happen with cucumber cross breeds and courgette cross breeds. Fortunately, the poisons taste bitter so there are only few severe cases every year but it's not unheard of.
My only problem is I can never really let them vine-ripen completely, because the birds always get them.
In your country you have birds that eat tomatos? Cool =) Our birds totally ignore them. We have green flies and white flies galore, though.My only problem is I can never really let them vine-ripen completely, because the birds always get them.
They are tough onesthey said too was that my baby jade would survive they are really very tuff plants and such..-- so I might have a chance with not killing it too badly.
Yes! I long to enclose everything in chicken wire, but at the moment I don't have access-- or the skills. I was looking at chicken wire... cloches? on Amazon to protect my anticipated ground cherries, but they were ridiculously expensive. And the way things are going so far, I probably won't need them.Could you build a chicken-wire cage around the plants? Then all you'd have to worry about are rabbits and crafty gophers.
In your country you have birds that eat tomatos? Cool =) Our birds totally ignore them. We have green flies and white flies galore, though.
my brother grows wine for a hobby and he pulls old nylon stockings over the fruit so that the blackbirds can't eat them. Maybe that would work with your tomatos? But yu'd then have the problem that if further blossoms open on the same cluster of fruit, youd have to impollinate them by hand since bumble bees that usually do that job can't get through the stockings.
That's where chicken wire, in a large enough radius around the plants, works well. It won't stop bees, but will stop birds. And again, rabbits are another story.
1/2" mesh would do the trick.
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my brother grows wine for a hobby and he pulls old nylon stockings over the fruit so that the blackbirds can't eat them. Maybe that would work with your tomatos? But yu'd then have the problem that if further blossoms open on the same cluster of fruit, youd have to impollinate them by hand since bumble bees that usually do that job can't get through the stockings.
and, I just joined a local plant group on fb and well they are all really nice people and helped me to figure out about the watering of my jade what they said too was that my baby jade would survive they are really very tuff plants and such..-- so I might have a chance with not killing it too badly.
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I'm no expert but I do have two inherited jade plants, and after eleven years they're still going strong despite being frozen, baked at 110 degrees, ignored, and having tree volunteers take root in their containers. So, I think they're pretty tough, and once in a while they even bloom. So, I like your chances![]()
... planning on it, does that count?
How about planting pretty weeds? There are rather handsome ones and many weeds are edible, some are even delicious. Ground Elder is excellent in cottage cheese, herb butter or a herb soup. Wild Origano is just as tasty as its tame brother. Nettles are delicious with feta cheese as a stroodle filling or a filling for ravioli (not suitable for people with gout, kidney problems or with a malfunction of the parathyriod gland). Daisies are very tasty on bread and butter or in a salad. Dandelion flowers make a nice tea but you can also roll cheese balls in the petals: looks pretty and tastes very good. Young dandelion leaves make a good salad (if you have liver problems you should eat only little, though).The weeds grow though.
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