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Joined: Feb 2011
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I know this is the start of fish season, but the garden we wanted took priority. We're trying both hybrid and heritage tomatoes this year and hope to save the heritage seeds. We've been doing the raised bed deal in town for years, and wanted to do the same here. I've waited 13 years to play with the pond every day, and now I have the urge to check the garden before I head out each morning. Tomatoes are blooming, potatoes are poking up, and all the seeds are peaking through. I put in flower beds, and we've filled those with herbs. The rosemary we love, and the Lavender attracts butterflies. I see now why few farmers have trouble sleeping. Between fun projects, my garden, my fish, getting the pastures ready for hay season, and fixing leased pasture fences for cattle, I'm gassed!
Last edited by FireIsHot; 04/11/23 10:28 AM.
AL
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Joined: Jul 2010
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Hall of Fame 2014
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Hall of Fame 2014
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nice Al! i want a salad from your garden
Fishing has never been about the fish....
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Hall of Fame Lunker
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I tilled mine up today got alot of work to do in it tomorrow before Thursday chance of tornadoes..
I believe in catch and release. I catch then release to the grease.. BG. CSBG. LMB. HSB. RES.
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Moderator Ambassador Field Correspondent Lunker
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Moderator Ambassador Field Correspondent Lunker
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Al, come on up here in a month and you can do it all over again.
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esshup, magic 8 ball says "Outlook not so good".
I have a early 80's troybuilt that has been an absolute workhorse. A shot of Deep Creep and it runs like a champ. But, I got a Mantis several years ago, and the troybuilt is just about retired. I forgot what I payed for the Mantis, but if it crashes, I'll go buy another one. They're perfect for raised and flower beds. After a year or two, we'll just use the broadfork. No reason to turn the soil over once it gets settled in.
AL
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Al,
Looking at putting raised beds for a garden either this spring or next and was wondering how you constructed them. They look like a 4x4 every x feet (maybe 8) and a 1x8? Did I guess right?
Mark
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Made some for Mom by using two 2x12's with posts every 8 feet. Wanted to get it higher so she wouldn't have to bend over that much. 4' wide so the middle could be easily reached from either side.
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Those little mantis tillers are awesome, especially for raised beds. Pull em' backwards and they'll dig forever!
By the way...Mantis, and Echo are one and the same as far as mini-tillers.
"Forget pounds and ounces, I'm figuring displacement!"
If we accept that: MBG(+)FGSF(=)HBG(F1) And we surmise that: BG(>)HBG(F1) while GSF(<)HBG(F1) Would it hold true that: HBG(F1)(+)AM500(x)q.d.(=)1.5lbGRWT? PB answer: It depends.
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Al, are you going to high fence the garden?
It's not about the fish. It's about the pond. Take care of the pond and the fish will be fine. PB subscriber since before it was in color.
Without a sense of urgency, Nothing ever gets done.
Boy, if I say "sic em", you'd better look for something to bite. Sam Shelley Rancher and Farmer Muleshoe Texas 1892-1985 RIP
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Chairman, Pond Boss Legacy award; Moderator; field correspondent Lunker
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Chairman, Pond Boss Legacy award; Moderator; field correspondent Lunker
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Lookin good amigo - don't forget to fence those beds like Dave says.
Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after. ~ Henry David Thoreau
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Lunker
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My uncle uses a motion activated water sprinkler to keep deer out of his garden. Been the most effective measure for him ever.
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Al,
Looking at putting raised beds for a garden either this spring or next and was wondering how you constructed them. They look like a 4x4 every x feet (maybe 8) and a 1x8? Did I guess right?
Mark lassig, that's basically it. We have a runoff area just outside the raised beds, so I had to get creative with the layout. But, I used 2X10's 10" long for the sides, and 4X4's 8" long for the posts. This left me with as few cuts as possible. I built the sides in the shop, then just carted them out and laid them out upside down before I drilled the post holes. That took any measurement errors from hosing me. It was much easier than drilling holes and then trying to put it all together in the mud. Yeah guys, I think a fence will be up soon. Critters don't worry me as much as the huge grasshoppers we'll get in a few months. Momma has some type of homemade Tabasco cocktail that works great in town on the hostas. We'll soon see how good it really is. TJ, you and you're damned camera thread! Now we sit out every evening and watch the birds. I'll have to drag the real camera out soon now. Right now, the bluebirds are nesting in the houses we set up for them on dead oak stumps, and we love watching them. Our favorite birds are the killdeer. If you haven't watched them nest, then you've really missed something cool. They're shore birds, but somehow have adapted to our asphalt parking area. killdear faking injury
AL
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Joined: May 2011
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Our favorite birds are the killdeer. If you haven't watched them nest, then you've really missed something cool. They're shore birds, but somehow have adapted to our asphalt parking area.
Killdeer will lay eggs pretty much anywhere. I have seen in gravel, concrete, and in wheat fields.
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I built a fence around the garden to keep the deer and rabbits out, only to discover that the local squirrels like to destroy tomato plants. First, they pick all of the green tomatoes off and chew a hole in them, then they chew through the plant's trunk, a few inches above the ground, killing it.......... I guess they ain't called squirrels for no reason.
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Lunker
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Lunker
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Got 6 rows of taters in and all the fresh greens you can think of. All the greens are sprouting rapidly with the recent warm up. Hope you all have a great season.
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Ambassador Lunker
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There are killdeer that nest at the edge of our stone driveway every year. Nearly impossible to spot their nests....camouflage is dead on.
"Forget pounds and ounces, I'm figuring displacement!"
If we accept that: MBG(+)FGSF(=)HBG(F1) And we surmise that: BG(>)HBG(F1) while GSF(<)HBG(F1) Would it hold true that: HBG(F1)(+)AM500(x)q.d.(=)1.5lbGRWT? PB answer: It depends.
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Joined: May 2011
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Joined: May 2011
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Me and the wife watched these little guys hatch. It was awesome. We ended up staking the area off because they were so hard to see even though we knew right where they were.
"If you aim at nothing you'll hit it every time" Zig Ziglar
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Lunker
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Lunker
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I had every intension of transplanting my tomato and pepper plants from the indoor growing room to the garden yesterday, but ran out of daylight...good thing though, we were hit with a hail storm last night. The window folks are going to be busy for a while.
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There are killdeer that nest at the edge of our stone driveway every year. Nearly impossible to spot their nests....camouflage is dead on. That's very true. We put out markers so we wouldn't run over them. Very hard to see.
AL
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I have Kildeer nest lining my driveway every year.. Pretty much turns into a buffet for the local owl that hangs out on the light post... Picks them off one by one every year kinda sad..
Also my garden aspirations have been washed away literally at this time.. I bet were pushing 4 or more inches of rain since I tilled it..
I believe in catch and release. I catch then release to the grease.. BG. CSBG. LMB. HSB. RES.
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Lunker
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Lunker
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So the question on wood to use for the raised beds, treated or Cedar?
Understand the wetness, 1.5" inch here in Schuyler County.
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Moderator Ambassador Field Correspondent Lunker
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Moderator Ambassador Field Correspondent Lunker
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Cedar isn't available locally for a reasonable price so I used treated.
Personal taste here, I'd use whatever that lasted the longest.
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Joined: Jan 2012
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Pulled out the broccoli and added tomatoes...in one bed
Gonna do one last harvest on the greens and then rip them out and plant sweet datil peppers this weekend....
Hot datil pepper over wintered again, of coarse only the roots so it is cut back and just starting to re-sprout now from the cut back trunk.
Goofing off is a slang term for engaging in recreation or an idle pastime while obligations of work or society are neglected........... Wikipedia
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Cedar isn't available locally for a reasonable price so I used treated.
Personal taste here, I'd use whatever that lasted the longest. I've never gave much thought to it but they say don't use treated because of the treating chemicals.. you know what would work great but are hard to find is old barn flooring that stuff that's like 2 1/2" thick.. I use deep raised beds with no sides works great and no limitations I can expand a bed or make a bed skinnier very easily.. Also I just tilled Tuesday night and it proceeded to dump 4.89 inches of rain since then.. Thought I had some better pics but here's one of my onions last year
I believe in catch and release. I catch then release to the grease.. BG. CSBG. LMB. HSB. RES.
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