Do not you put on the bulbs? It was clear that it seems to me on Didier's video: a second shot to plant the bulb against the ground and fill the hole left by the tip of the plant under the bulb.
How do you make your spinach? They look good in place.
A vegetable lazy Sarthe
- to be chafoin
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to be chafoin wrote:Do not you put on the bulbs? It was clear that it seems to me on Didier's video: a second shot to plant the bulb against the ground and fill the hole left by the tip of the plant under the bulb.
How do you make your spinach? They look good in place.
when the soil is loose enough (well let's say moist and flexible) you can stick your bulbs in without using a dibber, in any case I do like that, and then you put a good layer of unpacked hay that's especially what is important, the bulb is found in the end, stuck in the inter-phase soil hay mineralization
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to be chafoin wrote:Do not you put on the bulbs? It was clear that it seems to me on Didier's video: a second shot to plant the bulb against the ground and fill the hole left by the tip of the plant under the bulb.
How do you make your spinach? They look good in place.
I make a shallow hole in the dibber, pressing well. If there is a vacuum, like a rodent gallery I plant elsewhere! The spinach plants are sown in a plate in my friend Michael's greenhouse. I implanted them with the rache at the dibber, but obviously that was enough. Can be a little too dense on the other hand ...
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New hay has arrived!
60 small square boots ... Something to see coming!
60 small square boots ... Something to see coming!
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Square boots?
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Sustainable energy consulting for construction
http://www.philippeservices.net/
http://www.philippeservices.net/
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phil12 wrote:Square boots?
Way to speak, actually they are rather rectangle! or even parallelepiped
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Short video of the day:
Good evening and good week to all
Good evening and good week to all
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I just watched. 50% ...
Another style. In movement, GoPro style, compared to mine. But a common denominator: feet on the table!
Syrphids - I think it is indeed - are also very useful auxiliaries to fight against aphids (the larvae of certain species).
I did not follow your series: why do you hunt hornets ??? Asians ??? Because the European hornet is a very valuable auxiliary to the vegetable patch. A voracious carnivore of caterpillars (genus cabbage). At home, they cleaned an attacked cabbage foot faster than I bought Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). Well, I'm distracted and slow - I went down to town, in the DIY store I saw something else, came back up without BT!
Your mustard lets it grow and beautify, fix all the residual nitrates still present, so that they are not washed away. It protects the ground. It nourishes mycorrhizae and bacteria in its rhizosphere. That benefits. At the end of winter only, you fold and pass the hay over it. Little fibrous, it will be quickly digested. Where you plant, you can even leave it up to a few days before planting and planting through the "crushed mustard + hay" layer. Where you sow, it is better to hay before, so that it decomposes ...
Another style. In movement, GoPro style, compared to mine. But a common denominator: feet on the table!
Syrphids - I think it is indeed - are also very useful auxiliaries to fight against aphids (the larvae of certain species).
I did not follow your series: why do you hunt hornets ??? Asians ??? Because the European hornet is a very valuable auxiliary to the vegetable patch. A voracious carnivore of caterpillars (genus cabbage). At home, they cleaned an attacked cabbage foot faster than I bought Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). Well, I'm distracted and slow - I went down to town, in the DIY store I saw something else, came back up without BT!
Your mustard lets it grow and beautify, fix all the residual nitrates still present, so that they are not washed away. It protects the ground. It nourishes mycorrhizae and bacteria in its rhizosphere. That benefits. At the end of winter only, you fold and pass the hay over it. Little fibrous, it will be quickly digested. Where you plant, you can even leave it up to a few days before planting and planting through the "crushed mustard + hay" layer. Where you sow, it is better to hay before, so that it decomposes ...
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Ah damn, for the hornets, I understood: the bees !!! You protect your "honey cows" ... (the honey bee is to bees what black hornless cows are to bovines).
I'm a little cow with honeybees - but they steal the scene from the hundreds of wild bees so much that I have to scratch them a little!
I'm a little cow with honeybees - but they steal the scene from the hundreds of wild bees so much that I have to scratch them a little!
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Did67 wrote:Where you plant you can even leave up to a few days before planting and planting through the layer "crushed mustard + hay ".
my mustard, high, I still found relatively fibrous ...
you say that it must be crushed after mowing?
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