Awesomeness. I have talked several times about a aquaponics greenhouse here. I have yet to pull the trigger and start the work. The chicken coop is solar powered. I am about ready for another project
That’s awesome! It’s been below freezing for couple weeks here. I’ve brought my fig cuttings inside and everything else is in greenhouse.
Rojo LIKED above post
Awesomeness. I have talked several times about a aquaponics greenhouse here. I have yet to pull the trigger and start the work. The chicken coop is solar powered. I am about ready for another project
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass alongRojo LIKED above post
Made a run up the road from the house today to collect some cool fig & pear tree cuttings. After collection I vacuum bag everything to go into storage except the Fig clusters, they are going straight into the ground as a cluster. We will see if the experiment works.
SD that bag on the right in the first picture has your name on it.
SuperDave336, S10CHEVY LIKED above post
That’s awesome. Do you know the varieties you got today?
We do not know the variety of the fig or pear, the fig I had here before. When we concreted our circle drive and porch the water run off killed the first one. So it is Golf ball to Tennis ball sized, yellow, very sweet, fig. The Mother tree is 50 years old and bears very heavy with little care. The Pear is a fast fruiting, fresh eating, self fertile variety and after grafting to a 6 way Pear I have now we will find out.
SuperDave336 LIKED above post
I received a nice collection of Muscadine cuttings to use for grafting to the wild Muscadine vines I have growing all over my place. Grapes are grafted the world over but I hear over and over Muscadinces can not be grafted. Well I have enough cuttings now to test that.
So the photo is a example of a storage practice that is used everywhere. These cuttings are exactly how I received them. Since all cuttings I have tried to store in a ziploc bag using a wet paper towel to keep the cuttings from drying out. My experience has been mold grows quickly when stored in that much humidity.
This photo has one variety of cuttings vacuum packed without extra moisture, seal in using just a little vacuum. This method retains the moisture without providing enough for mold growth.
Now that these are properly prepared for storage they can be placed in a refrigerator set to 40 degrees till needed for grafting about 30-45 days.
This is the last month to dig any Blueberry Babies to transplant still allowing them time to root before the soil warms back up.
The 2 root shoots to the left of the Mother Plant are Babies. You can dig them up, cut the root free from the Mother, and transplant after "Topping".
I cut the tops off as the Baby will grow Limb Buds when it's ready. Till then it just grows roots. You can see in the first picture above I do not use the soil I dug out. It needs to be pulverized since heavy clay or in my case I had a load of native top soil trucked in years ago that has sand in it. Here I put shovels of that instead as it will settle around the existing roots of the cutting much better. You are looking for a soil PH of around 5.5 so a sulfur soil acidifier without fertilizer is always a good addition right around the fresh dug area.
You may have to blow up the picture to see all the cuttings I planted but they go well past the Blueberry plant in the picture. The Kiln is growing in a way that I'm hardening off our property. A solid Southern Highbush Blueberry hedge is next impossible to get thru. Also I'm adding Muscadine vines with 16ft Hog panels underneath. I don't want my place to look like a Compound but that's exactly what I'm working towards.
SuperDave336, S10CHEVY LIKED above post
Those will turn out nice
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass alongRojo thanked you for this post
Growing Citrus is a easy way to make a tree pay for itself in a couple of years. Container growing Citrus is super easy & rewarding.
The picture above is a St.Ann Satsuma and it is three years old. I bought it as a one year old, didn't let it fruit the next year, and let it fruit last spring. Well as small as it is (they don't grow very big) we got 18 large Satsumas off it this last cycle. You can eat these starting in late August. Owari Satsumas have ripe fruit by the time the St. Ann is done. Owari & Brown Select are the main two Satsumas around here. Both can be grown in pots with potting soil. A 25 gallon pot full of potting soil is very easy to move with a dolly. Now Owari trees can take freezing temps once mature. Here 20-22 degrees and they survive.
Now these trees are Ponkan Mandarins and fruit mid November - mid January. These are about done. I will pick the smaller fruit to share with friends to take the load off the tree. Ponkan's skin is so easy to peel and the fruit is so sweet especially late they can not be squeezed for juice with a Power Juicer but are fantastic to eat right off the tree. The first picture the tree is younger than the second so I thinned the fruit. If you thin citrus you are rewarded with exceptional quality fruit. These can be grown in 25 gallon pots and moved with a dolly. All you do is prune them to keep the size small, the fruit still gets big.
This is one of my Page Mandarin trees, both loaded with fruit this cycle and are the orangest orange flavor of any Citrus. I grow these for fresh squeezed juice from November till I run out of fruit. At the time of posting this I just strip picked all the Page Mandarins left for Power Juicing. I use a distilled water jug to fill with juice and freeze till I run out of what's in the fridge. Not the best for fresh eating as harder to peel, lots of seeds.
In summary having a St. Ann, Owari, & Ponkan (all can be pruned to keep small) starting mid August to mid January, 5 months you can have fresh citrus to enjoy. Roll in the garage when a freeze is on the way or greenhouse if you have one.
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