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my winter garden
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[ATTACH]21760[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]21761[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]21762[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]21763[/ATTACH] Well,here is my first attempt to post pic of my winter garden. Pics show my two hoophouses, the inside and a Kosovo and Stupice plant. If this works and I get done celebrating with several bottle of wine, I might try again. Also, if I am successful, thanks to those that patiently showed me how. Hope I remember. |
Eureka! It worked. Many thanks to Feldon and others. Why do I love Tomatoville?? Because of folks like you!
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[ATTACH]21765[/ATTACH] Just for more practice, these two pics are of my hothouses which hold more tomato plants setting in buckets in a trench, plus cucumbers, carrots, cilantro and squash. |
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Since I am on roll, here is my Canadian wilderness "dock" garden.
First pic should be shot of one dock. Second is my bridege at the entrance to my lagoon third is one dock and some shore garden for carrots, lettuce, etc. Fourth is my hothouse and another dock. Firfth is the lagoon, my new dock in the background (should hold 21 plants) and my mini hoophouse. Here goes nuthin'. I think I only got the first three so will try another post for the last two.[ATTACH]21766[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]21767[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]21768[/ATTACH] |
So beautiful...heaven on earth! It looks like you are having lots of success- congratulations!
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Very nice!!! Thanks for keeping posting!!
Craig |
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[ATTACH]21770[/ATTACH] Again, this is my hothouse and another floating docvk with tomatoes and cukes. The second shows my new dock in the background which should hold 21 mater plants, my topsy-turvy set-up at the end of the dock (novelty) and my mini-hoop house which will hold the 70 seedlings that I will transport from Calif. until it is warm enough to plant out. |
Very cool! Why do you have them on the dock?
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zack...they are on docks as that is the only place where there is adequate sun. Most of my land is totally shaded by very tall pine trees. That little bit
of shoreline gets only enough sun for carrots, lettuce and junk tomatoes like Early Girl. Some advantages are less chance of soil born insects, bugs, varmits, etc. and easy access to free water and, best of all, no neighbors to complain about my singing to the tomatoes. Also, the geese and ducks keep me entertained while tending my "crops". Just a little ways to the right of that new dock is a nesting bald eagle and it is fun to listen to the sreech off the young 'uns demanding food. A pair of beavers have a home way in the back of the lagoon, so swim by en route to toppling trees elsewhere as they have already toppled all my leaf trees which is fine with me. I want only pines of various species and, at home in Calif., I want Palms, cycads and bamboo and no pines!! |
I really enjoy looking at different gardening set ups. You are a year-round gardener for sure, nice batch of cold frames and hoophouses! If this winter is any indication, we can *hope* for an early and warm summer to speed up those long season tomatoes next year. Glad you got the picture posting figured out. :cute:
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Wow, nice setup! How long is your growing season and what can you get away with in the hoop houses? Are they heated? Do you start tomatoes in Alpine and then cart them to Ontario? Sorry, lots of questions!
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RobinB....the season is short. DDsack has about the same season as
Bemidji, Mn and Int'l Falls, Mn vie for the coldest spots in the lower 48. So, yes, I will start all plants here and hopefully have them about 18" high by mid April and will bring them into motels with us and as soon as we arrive in the Canadian wilderness, they will go into the hoophouse and plant out will be near June 1. I leave on Oct. 1 for Calif. , so don't know the actual end of the season, but soon after. DDsack could answer that. I would assume DDsack has a greenhouse for doing similar headstartt stuff. I end up leaving a ton of green tomatoes to rot. In Oct., there is noone out there to give them to and I don't want to haul them and ask strangers if they want green tomatoes. LOL |
I have a very similar season. The last two years spring has been wacky and it's been below freezing with snow the first part of June, so plants haven't gotten into the ground until mid-June, but both years the first frost was late October, which partially compensated for it. Usually, first frost is early October. I don't have any hoop houses, but I'd really like to try something like that. I have tried wall o'waters which worked great, and I got the maters in the ground in early May in 2011.
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That is really an innovative idea. Keeps the rats on hooves (deer) out of them. I wondered why you were container gardening in the lake. Makes sense now. Now if only I could get my neighbors to cut down all the trees I could have a sunnier tomato garden. Does the lake keep it too cool at night? When do you usually get fruit to set?
The good news is we have been having record highs so maybe your lakes temp will be higher than normal. I saw a thermometer in Duluth near the lake today it said 46 degrees. I am loving it. Our luck it will snow in June here. It has happened. |
carpenterlady.....actually the llake water has a positive effect. If the June
temps dip down near freezing, the lake water temp is already in the forties at least and heat rises right up between the dock boards to my tomato plants |
please suggest me tomato seeds for Indian hot climate. temp is25'c to 35'c and rain is 10mm every day.
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Very cool setups! I am thinking of putting some of Raybo's earthtainers on my dock, but it's not a floater and the winter ice dams keep messing with my supports and pushing them. Safe enough for people, but if I had an extra 500 lbs on it all the time, not sure how they'd do. Maybe worry for nothing.
I have stone walls down at the lake (stairs leading down to the water from the house) and they warm up really well so I can actually plant down there earlier than up near the house between the lake and the rocks it's nice and toasty. Do you get muskrats in that lagoon? We get them here, so I'd need a lot of fencing to keep my tomatoes safe I'm sure. He pretty much clear cut all my ornamentals down there last year right to the ground! |
lakelady......no, I don't have any muskrats up there. I do have otters and
pine martens, but they have never bothered the tomatoes.......yet. I am amazed that the birds haven't become a problem as lots of red-winged blackbirds roost on the tomato cages but don't seem interested in the fruit. |
[QUOTE=rajan.bachhav;248175]please suggest me tomato seeds for Indian hot climate. temp is25'c to 35'c and rain is 10mm every day.[/QUOTE]
Rajan: Follow this link for some suggestions of heirloom seeds for hot, humid conditions. [url]http://www.tomatofest.com/tomato-seeds-tropical-hot-humid-collection.html[/url] Good luck VCScott |
I was just telling DH how amazed I am at the innovations a lot of you have for growing veggies in a tough climate. I love your set-up and thanks for sharing.
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[QUOTE=Alpinejs;257259]lakelady......no, I don't have any muskrats up there. I do have otters and
pine martens, but they have never bothered the tomatoes.......yet. I am amazed that the birds haven't become a problem as lots of red-winged blackbirds roost on the tomato cages but don't seem interested in the fruit.[/QUOTE] that actually makes sense because Birds don't eat tomatoes,,, they are after the water inside the fruit and they know the mature ones are softer and more watery. If you have source of water near your tomatoes I have noticed they will usually not bother with the extra effort of perching and pecking into the tomatoes for water . I live by a heavily wooded area, lots of birds, I keep a source of fresh water by my tomatoes on a small post and the pecking has been very minimal,(if I remember to keep the bowl filled ..lol) since doing this last season.... bird damage virtually dropped off. I still have the other critters to deal with however |
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