gardening

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read braiding sweetgrass, lib

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    |{{{}} \   |   /,  ~Y~(_)@(_)
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Let it grow ^.^

     __
  .-/  \-. If I had a flower
 (  \__/  ) for each time 
/`-./;;\.-`\ I thought
\ _.\;;/._ /  
 (  /  \  ) of communism           
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 ,    \\ (-. ) my garden 
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founded 4 years ago
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Just doing a walkabout and looks like Mr slug has gone to town additionally a lot of the first blooms are looking a bit ropey. Am I ok to do a decent dead head and prune Based in uk

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

10 pounds in total I'm guessing. Biggest haul in 3 years.

Log inoculation using sawdust spawn

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Seriously, I am tired of the stereotypes of leftists in the west looking like they all grow soy beans, as the fash call it ie weak as fuck. And almost to a large degree, it’s true.

I see chuds everywhere when I go to the community garden, and their plants are fucking huge ngl. They take care of their tomatoes. I don't care if you're growing potatoes, cucumbers, squash, artichokes, you have to have those fruits and leaves fucking huge and shooting to the sky and looking good. You want to help the cause? Help yourself. Do it for vanity, do it for others, do it for the greater good, I don’t care. Fucking weed and fertilize the best you can and get those veggies the biggest they can be.

It’s hard, but so is literally everything. Just know this is going to take 3-4 years of consistency. If you’re starting out, don’t worry about a garden layout, and just plant good shit. Your biggest goal at this point is consistency, watering 5 days a week. Do that over 3-4 years, and progressive growth every single day whether that be lettuce or whatever.

I want you fuckers to be fucking vain jesus fuck. Fuck your organics, use Miracle Grow for all I care, but have a green thumb while doing it. Slowly start doing more functional things such as eggplant or mushrooms w/e to truly maximise your gardening potential.

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That's it, that's the post.

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Caption this. (hexbear.net)
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

https://subium.com/profile/grickle.bsky.social/post/3kwrwhxjy5526

In the original the text is the bland "He was so pleased with the garden that season."

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I'm growing the seeds from last year, although only 1 has survived my attempts to keep them alive.

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fucked up again this year and didn't support my tomatoes fully because i figured the stems were thick enough

rainy season hits and two of my biggest plants snapped in half because they were too top heavy lol, lost like half my first batch. is there any coming back from this or are things joever for me this season?

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So my dad has a cellar that is completely empty. We just store some plants there during the winter months. Now, I had an idea. In theory, I could plant around 100 mushrooms down there, right? There is a little bit of light coming in through a small window. Climate-wise, we are in Central Europe.

Is there anything I should know or be aware of? Are there any mushroom types that are beginner-friendly? I would plant them for personal consumption, for me and my relatives.

Bad Idea ? Good Idea ?

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The shishitos are getting freaky.

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One neighbour LOVES bees and the other neighbour HATES them - WHO DO YOU SUPPORT

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I was shopping for a new scythe blade when I found this beautiful and incredibly long competition scythe blades.

In the video, they seem to be judged not just on time but also on how well the area is mowed. I find this fascinating.

Source: https://onescytherevolution.com/1/post/2011/07/competition-scythe-blades.html

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Damn this is cool

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2413548

The Etsy link has very good photos.

Cryptanthus Elaine Earth Star Bromeliads - Etsy

Cryptanthus bromeliads, more commonly known as earth stars due to the rosette-shaped arrangement of the leaves and their low growth habit, are beautiful and incredibly varied plants native to Brazil. Their colors range from dark green to bright pink to red, and they can be banded, spotted, solid, or virtually any other pattern.

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Although since they refuse to die, you could consider it a hydroponic garden

Yes, it is rainy and cold and cloudy, and yes I built it at the bottom of a hill, but I had been here for 6 months and never had any issues with flooding, and this is despite the emergence of several large lakes nearby which did not exist in summer

Then Spring rolls around, I get a few days of boiling hot sunshine, I do the garden, and the moment I finish, we get the most consistently wet weather so far

Initially I realised my mistake was that, idiot that I am, I packed in several large rocks, thinking that because they do not absorb water, they will increase drainage - WRONG! they provide an impenetrable barrier through which no water can pass

After a month of this, I was able to dig up the herb garden with much effort and take the rocks out, and the pool immediately began to empty. I topped it up with more soil and perlite after that, but consistently bad weather means it keeps on flooding - Rosemary, Lavender and Thyme are all holding up, but the Cat Mint is fully submerged

If the sun ever comes out again, I think I will just build a planter

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Think of a time when you've seen a big group of people you don't know. Maybe you enter a new class, or see a crowd at an event, or there's a team of people building or maintaining something. If you don't know them, your brain might just classify them as "the people in the class/event/construction site" and not go further. But obviously, each one of those people has their own personality, inner life, needs, desires, etc, that is occluded by a casual definition of "they're the crowd in this class/event/construction site".

The same kind of thing happens when you look at a green space that you don't know, whether it's a forest, a meadow, a garden, or just a little patch of growth. It's easy for your brain to just think "it's a forest" and not classify any further.

Naming something is an important part of recognizing it and understanding it as a distinct entity. Once you've put a name to something, it's possible to character it as a unique part of the whole. For a plant, naming it helps you understand what it likes, doesn't like, where it grows, what eats it or doesn't, it's morphology and how it varies over the season. Naming doesn't mean understanding but it is a necessary step that allows understanding.

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i'm trying to improve the soil quality in my yard, it's hard and clay-like and roots have a hard time going down below like 4 cm. i have cow patties, rice hulls, rinsed coco coir and some cardboard.

currently the plan has been to mix up the patties and rice hulls and bury that below ground (completed already), then mulch with the coir + hulls + patties, then finally cover with cardboard. the yard is small so not much cardboard involved. i'm growing cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, eggplants and beans this year, they should have been in the ground already but i wanted to grow from seed and my cats got to the sprouts. so i gotta get new ones agony-acid

please tell me what i am missing or what i could do better.

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WHEAT (hexbear.net)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

you-are-a-serf

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Got these clippings from a family friends garden last fall and they're really starting to show their power levels.

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