Ok, so I called the company. I had great success (or so I felt) because they are reshipping almost all of my bare rooted plants. I found out that my blackberries were indeed alive (I did bark scrapings to find out) and that one is starting to put out leaf buds at the base. For my raspberries...
That is what i thought was weird. My seeds are all great! It's just the live plants that are all crashing. At this point, I just want a refund (which I doubt they'll give) for all the dead ones so that I can get new plants from the local nurseries.
Has anyone else had problems with Gurney's? So far, not ONE of my bare rooted plants have survived. Nor have the ones from Henry Fields (I think they are related as they have identical phone numbers except for the last number). I ordered 2 sets of raspberries, 1 set of blackberries, 1 set of...
Dang! I KNEW I should have kept those funky eggs from the back of the fridge. Maybe, DH ignored my request to toss them. Does anyone know of anything the insides are used for. These are well past expiration.
The reason you clip the first year's fruit (or in the case of everbearing fruit until June/July) is to let the roots become established. It'll kill itself to produce fruit instead of creating good foundation roots otherwise.
From what I was reading, the mound is literally a pile of dirt 12-18 inches tall. 3 or 4 stalks of corn are planted on the top. After a week or two (enough time to give the corn a jumpstart before the beans grow on it), 6-8 pole bean plants are planted around the corn. A week or two after...
I've found that lavendar is as easy to grow as sage. I'm past the first year. Grasshoppers seem to like it but don't do enough damage to kill the plant. Mantids will live on it to get the grasshoppers.
Wow! That's a bargain! Home Depot just recently had one for $95 dollars the other day. I asked one of their employees about why they sell a product that is illegal to use and she just shrugged. It's also interesting that cities and suburbs are excluded in collecting as they are usually the...
Oh, another thing I've heard of is putting feeder goldfish in the barrel to eat algae. I don't know if it's effective but might be worth a try. The most you could lose is $.50 worth of feeder goldfish (that's about 4 fish).
It has something to do with the table water and river water. I don't know. To me, it's a bunch of hogwash and so upsetting when I see the gutters full to overflow during torrental (?) rains and not being able to use them. I have thought about getting some illegal ones for the back yard...
I'm going to use my chickens to help me keep my grasshopper population to a tolerable level. We also have Mantids and ladybugs in the garden. I can't help but think that if they are there without me putting them there that it is because their dinner is plentiful.