I was watching a series on youtube Victorian Farm, Edwardian Farm - something like that. Three people got together and lived like they lived back in those times and they got blight in the potato field (this was in Englad I believe). The "cure" was to cut the top 2/3 of the greens and burn...
I picked all of mine the other day and ripped up all but 4 of my mater plants. I did it because my chickens figured out that they like green tomaotes and I don't have my raised beds fensed off (that's where they are planted). I had to toss several off into the woods because they had chicken...
I planted rutgers and cherry sweet 100's and I have to say they did pretty well. I wouldn't have minded more off the rutgers though. I still have some coming in so I can't complain to much.
The rutgers got a huge thumbs up from DH and his family (I'm not much of a fresh tomato eater) for...
I don't know if it's advisable for a well....
but I'm thinking get you some pots..place one on a stand in the center of the well cap, and then more pots all around the stand on top of the well cap, than more around the well, you could make a strawberry pyramid...or just assorted plants.
Just a...
Yellow jackets did the very same thing to my blackberries...the little stinkers. I've found one nest, but haven't found how best to kill them yet. I'm dreading the fall. They get more aggressive in the cooler weather and their nest is under my potato baskets.
My DD is 13 and I can't get that child out into the garden LOL. That's okay though. I really enjoy going out into the garden in the early morning and evenings and it's peaceful.
I found a horned tomatoe worm doing it's worst to one of my tomato plants - a cherry sweet 100 I believe (took me...
Thanks Dinkadoo and Tank. Yes, I had thought about those, but around here they are far to expensive for my budget, even the seconds.
My hubby did luck out and got to HD while they were having a cull cart sale (not advertised to the public in the papers, just a sign on the door when you walked...
SS,
I've been told if you get a piece of homemade cold process soap - something mild like a castile - and put it in the crotches of the tree, the rain will melt the soap and it will run down the bark of the tree and repell the ants to keep them from getting the figs.
I've never tried this...
I'm the type that likes to be flexible with stuff. More than likely, I would buy the pavers just so I could move them if I wasn't happy with the initial arrangement.
I also did an experiment of sort between my raised beds. Between half of them, I put straw and the other half, some old pavers...