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February 8th, 2009 | #1 | ||
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#1 Garden Thread
I have been spreading compost all over my garden spot. Also using a garden claw to do some cultivating with. I don't need a tiller this year. Using a twenty foot by twenty five foot area. That doesn't sound big but you can get a lot in an area that size by wide row planting method, which is similar to what Whites in Rhodesia are doing so they don't starve.
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Last year, I had a great garden. I used nothing but miracle grow that you put in a garden hose sprayer bottle. I did that once a week. That was the only water things got unless it rained. No fertilizers at all. No pesticides. If I wanted that shit on my food, I would just nix the garden and buy frankenfoods at the grocery store. Also, look for heirloom seeds that are non GMO and can be reused next year. I did have an infestation of mexican bean beetles and they eat more than beans. They wouldn't touch tomatoes but everything else was fair game to them. So, I am going to try neem oil this year, which a friend recommended. Supposed to be natural stuff. I am also going to try water and cayenne pepper in a spray bottle. I am told that keeps away pests. Okay, anyone else got a garden going or have tips?
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March 1st, 2009 | #2 |
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I have a herbs that beats the pests to the goodies.
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March 1st, 2009 | #3 |
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Try companion planting
Plant Good Neighbours How it works Bad Neighbours Apple Nasturtium, Chives Nasturtium climbs tree and is said to repel codling moth Potatoes Apricot Basil, Tansy, Asparagus Basil and tansy are said to repel damaging insects Asparagus Apricot, Basil, Chives, Comfrey, Lovage, Marjoram, Parsley, Tomatoes Basil and Parsley are said to improve flavour. Onions and garlic release substances reducing growth. Garlic, Onions Balm (Lemon) Tomatoes Attracts bees, said to enhance flavour and growth Basil Tomatoes Basil said to repel flies and mosquitoes Beans (climbing) Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Carrots, Cauliflower, Corn, Lettuce, Lovage, Majoram, Parsley Beetroot, Chives, Garlic, Gladiolus, Onions, Sunflower Beetroot Beans (bush), Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Kohl Rabi, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Onion, Peas, Potato, Spinach, Silverbeet Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth Beans (Climbing), Tomato Borage Squash, Strawberries, Tomato Said to deter tomato worm and improve tomato flavour and yield. Said to increase strawberry yield. Brassicas (Incl: Broccoli, Cabbage, Cauliflower) Beans, Beetroot, Carrots, Chamomile, Coriander, Cucumber, Dill, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Marigold (French), Mint, Nasturtium, Pea, Potato, Rosemary, Sage, Tansy, Thyme, Zinnias Dill attracts a Cabbage White Butterfly controlling wasp. Nasturtium disguises and repels aphids. Sage repels the Cabbage White Butterfly. Zinnias attract ladybirds, which we love! Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth Garlic, Rue, Strawberry, Tomato Capsicum, Chilli Carrots, Onions, Tomato Carrots Beans, Chives, Coriander, Cucumber, Leeks, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Onion, Pea, Radish, Rosemary, Sage, Tomato Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth Dill, Celery Celery Cabbage, Chives, Dill, Dwarf Beans, Leek, Lovage, Majoram, Onion, Pea, Sage, Spinach, Tomato Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth Carrots, Parsnip, Potato Chamomile Cabbage, Onion Deters flies and mosquitoes. Strengthens neighbouring plants Chives Apples, Cucumbers, Lettuce, Peas Prevents Apple Scab. Said to deter aphids Beans Cucumber Basil, Bens, Borage, Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Carrot, Cauliflower, Corn, Dill Kohl Rabi, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Nasturtium, Parsnip, Pea, Radish, Sunflower, Tansy Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth Potato, Sage, Strongly Aromatic Herbs Dill Brassicas (Incl: Broccoli, Cabbage, Cauliflower) Dill attracts a Cabbage White Butterfly controlling wasp Eggplant Beans, Spinach Garlic Apricot, Cherry, Mulberry, Parsnip, Peach, Pear, Raspberry, Rosemary, Rose Deters aphids, especially from roses and raspberry. Repels Cabbage White Butterfly Beans, Cabbage, Peas, Strawberry Kohl Rabi Beetroot, Onion Beans, Tomato Leek Carrot, Celery, Lovage, Majoram, Onion, Parsnip, Strawberry Beans, Peas, Parsley Lettuce Achillea, Beans, Beetroot, Cabbage, Carrot, Chervil, Coreopsis, Cucumber, Lovage, Marjoram, Marigold (French), Onion, Parsnip, Pea, Radish, Strawberry, Zinnia Achillea, Coreopsis & Zinnia attract pollinators and offer shade for lettuce Parsley Marigolds (French) Numerous vegetables, including tomato Kills root knot nematodes and eel worm Melon Radish, Sweet Corn Mint Cabbage, Tomato Deters pests such as Cabbage White Butterfly, ants and fleas Nasturtium Cabbages, Fruit Trees, Radishes, Zucchini Flowers repel aphids and codling moth. Cabbage white butterfly is attracted to this plant, and will seek it out over cabbages Onion Beetroot, Broccoli, Cabbage, Carrot, Chamomile, Leeks, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Parsley, Parsnip, Silverbeet, Strawberry, Summer Savory, Tomato Smell of onion said to deter numerous pestsOnions release substances reducing growth of Bad Neighbours Asparagus, Beans, Gladioli, Peas Parsley Asparagus, Sweet Corn, Tomato Said to improve flavour of asparagus and tomato Peas Beans, Beetroot, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Carrot, Cauliflower, Celery, Cucumber, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Parsnip, Potato, Radish, Sage, Squash, Sweet Corn Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth. Sweet Corn has traditionally been used as "living stakes" for peas Chives, Garlic, Onion, Shallots Potato Beans, Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Corn, Eggplant, Horseradish, Lovage, Marjoram, Marigold (French), Nasturtium, Parsnip, Peas, Sweet Alyssum, Sweet Corn, Watermelon Sweet Alyssum and Marigolds attract beneficials and suppress weedsPotatoes release substances reducing growth of Bad Neighbours. Horseradish should be planted at the corners of the patch Apple, Celery, Cherry, Cucumber, Pumpkin, Raspberry, Rosemary, Squash, Sunflower, Tomato Pumpkin Beans, Cabbage, Eggplant, Peas, Radish, Sweet Corn Bad Neighbours roots release substances reducing growth Potato Radish Beans, Carrot, Chervil, Cucumber, Sweet Corn, Cucumber, Lettuce, Lovage, Marjoram, Nasturtium, Parsnip, Pea, Spinach, Sweet Corn Radish is said to attract leaf miners from Spinach Hyssop Raspberry |
March 1st, 2009 | #4 |
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my garden is pure clay. so I decided to use my aryan ingenuity to do something about it. I had the local quarry dump ten tons of stone dust in the garden (at $6/ton, the cost was $60 plus $70 for the delivery).
this stone dust was the runoff from the quarry operations, they regarded it as waste, but in actuality it is a good sandy/silty loam. I built two seives (coarse and fine) and have been tilling the sifted loam into the garden at 3-4 inches. soil feels wonderful (although it is now purply-brown since the stone dust was blue and clay was red). Note: I also plan on tilling in decayed wood chips and rotten leaves to enrich the soil.
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March 1st, 2009 | #5 |
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Really just started planting a small vegetable garden (tomatos/lettuce/carrots/bell peppers/onions & spices) the last couple of years. I was surprised how much actual fun it is to garden. We had a blast sharing fresh produce with family/friends.
We are going to take Kievsky's advice and really go all-out with the garden this year. We're expanding it, as the neighbors also garden, and we're going to share the work/yield from the extra lot. We even have a road-side stand opportunity available to us if the yields are what we expect. Stuff grows like crazy around here, and I have a friend that works for a local soil/mulching company, so I always get some great soil ferts. If you have the room, everyone should have at least a small garden. They pay for themselves with just the price of the tomatoes, which are always inexplicably ridiculously high around here. Like an Irish George Washington, I am now a retired gentleman farmer. (and brewer) Git cho' plant on, niggaz!
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"When US gets nuked and NEMO is uninhabitable, I will make my way on foot to the gulf and live off red snapper and grapefruit"- Alex Linder Last edited by Donnie in Ohio; March 1st, 2009 at 09:33 AM. |
March 1st, 2009 | #6 | |
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Worms are your friend in the garden. They will aerate the soil.
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March 1st, 2009 | #7 |
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Maxine, thanks for those lists! I am going to paste and print those for future reference.
We are buying a new home. Close end of March, so I am not doing anything to present garden plot. I will be planting grass seed so the landlord gets it back the way I found it. New place will have to tilled, etc.
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The average kwan is of such low quality that he'd shoot himself if he had any self awareness. -Joe from Ohio |
March 1st, 2009 | #8 | |||
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The average kwan is of such low quality that he'd shoot himself if he had any self awareness. -Joe from Ohio |
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March 2nd, 2009 | #9 |
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Oh i love gardening! I just got started on a herb garden to use with my meals
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March 2nd, 2009 | #10 |
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I am in the process of preparing my planting beds as well.
DTZ, I've found it's unnecessary to till your plot more than once every five years, especially if you tend your garden meticulously,like I do. Once the soil is softened up, you should be able to turn it with a garden spade, or even a hand shovel for many seasons. Like DTZ, I too employ a roughly 20x25 foot plot. Though it may sound small, you can indeed reap a bountiful crop, if you maximize your space, and learn all you can about companion planting. This year I will be harvesting tomatoes (My absolute favorite, and I enjoy growing many different variaties), beans, cabbage, peppers, cucumbers, and squash to name a but few, as well as a very well stocked herb garden. (Yea mint, catnip, elderberries and thyme!) Fuck the goddamn kikes and their koser food scam, additives and pretty poisons! Grow your own food, and live longer! Plus any money you save by growing your own, is money not going into the pockets of greedy, shiftless kikes. Growing vegetables is almost too easy (if you're White, of course, because then you can actually read gardeining books ) if you have the right information. Do a soil test before you plant anything. Test kits are cheap and available everywhere. A .7 ph reading is ideal for most vegetables, and herbs. I would reccomend Rodale's complete gardening manual, or any Rodale books, on this subject. I believe that while their publishing house is certainly jewish, the authors are not. There really are some great techniques there, so look into it. Good luck, and happy harvesting!
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March 2nd, 2009 | #11 |
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I am moving end of the month. Buying a new house. I will have a garden there. I should be able to get it in just in time.
I have several gardening books and they made it very, very easy to do. I really didn't have to do much to it once it was planted. Just harvest. Like I said before, it is great relaxation.
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The average kwan is of such low quality that he'd shoot himself if he had any self awareness. -Joe from Ohio |
March 2nd, 2009 | #12 |
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Well, I wish I didn't have much to do- I'm in the process of finishing the summer garden- only Okra and cucumbers still bearing- and digging out the entrenched root mass of kikikui and giant parramatta grass that has invaded the unused areas.
But on the plus side, the soil is great and the climate sub-tropical. Fellow aussies will know what I mean if I say I have ATSIC soil ( ATSIC was the now-disbanded marxist-run Aboriginal Black racial control agency )...it's black, it's very very rich, and full of worms. |
March 2nd, 2009 | #13 |
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I am going to try growing shitake mushrooms in a friends wood lot. Takes about two years, things should be real bad two years into Bami.
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March 2nd, 2009 | #14 |
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Check out
http://rareseeds.com/ I grew their Cream of Saskatchewan WATERMELON (Citrullus vulgaris) 25-35 seeds per packet. We're #1 in heirloom watermelons–check our selection! Thrives in summer heat. A long-standing crop in the South, where it was originally transported by slaves from Africa. Sow the seed one-half inch deep outdoors after frost-season is over and soil is warm. Soil should be rich and well-amended with compost or manure. Sow the seed 6 inches to one foot apart, in rows 6-8 feet apart. Or sow in hills 6-8 feet apart, 5 seeds per hill, and thin to the best three plants. Where summers are short or cool, try "icebox" (very small) types; or try any variety that comes from cooler, northerly climates. May be started indoors from seed no more than 2-3 weeks prior to setting-out date, and never let watermelon seedlings become root-bound in their pots. Watermelon is probably ripe when the light patch on the underside has changed to pale yellow, and the tendril immediately opposite the stem from the fruit has withered. Attention, Watermelon Farmers: Due to Watermelon Fruit Blotch, growers who want watermelon seed in quantities over 1 oz (per variety) must sign and return a waiver before shipment. For information call: 417-924-8917 Cream of Saskatchewan 80 days A beautiful little melon with sweet, tasty, cream-colored flesh! An excellent variety for the North. Fruits around 8-10 lbs each, with a striped, green rind. A favorite of those who grow it! An old heirloom. Item Code: WM133 $2.50 It was excellent and it had a very thin rind, ie will not ship well. You would never be able to by something like that in the store. Latter this fall I was paging through a book of Ostfront pictures there was a soldat digging into a watermelon that look exactly like it. An old trick used by the Mennonite Farmers in Russia was to boil down watermelons for the sugar and use it to make bread. Like I say sugar may be too expensive for us if we have to buy it over seas and we need to save our ZOG Bucks for Whipping. |
March 3rd, 2009 | #15 | |
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Don't forget put some fruit trees in too. I have chickens and a duck to keep most pest out and free pooh too. The chickens turn the soil when it is in rest. My garden is a Premaculture one. So no waste what so ever. |
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March 3rd, 2009 | #16 | |
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Apples are an industry (uh, well, before China dumped their juice apples in the US) here, so they are a suitable tree. Can't do oranges, etc, though. Too cold in the winter. I have room for chickens. I will pass on a rooster, though, for my neighbors' sake. I will have to look up premaculture. I am not familiar with it unless you have some info you can post on it?
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March 29th, 2009 | #18 |
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today I put in my peas and potatoes, onions, beets, turnips, spinach, collards, and lettuce.
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March 29th, 2009 | #19 |
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Where are you at, roughly, Witzgall?
It is almost time for me to get planting, but not quite, due to my elevation, etc. Besides, closing on a house tomorrow. Have to till in a new garden.
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The average kwan is of such low quality that he'd shoot himself if he had any self awareness. -Joe from Ohio |
March 29th, 2009 | #20 | |
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Keep in touch and let me know how your garden comes along. I only just started gardening seriously last year, so I'm still in the learning phase.
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