The vegetable garden without getting tired

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
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Did67
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by Did67 » 19/05/20, 12:31

Ah yes, suggest that they grow artichokes! It's so easy and good !!!

How everyone laughs in turn!
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by Doris » 19/05/20, 12:46

Did67 wrote:Me, I attract them to trap them !!! Like that, I know where to find them. Artichokes work well.


I have to find something else, artichoke in martyr plant, I risk the breakdown of my couple
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by Doris » 19/05/20, 12:52

stephgouv wrote:
Doris wrote:... Last year on my initial 35 m2 vegetable garden I trapped 9 in ten days. ...

It's about the size of my vegetable garden so no wonder it's a minefield!
By the way, stupid question: is there a risk of "collapsing" the ground if too many galleries?


Collapse is too much said, but for a while the ground was super soft, and we sank a little. It's a funny job. For your vertical gallery: I had the case with my neighbor, try to follow the route a little, on the vertical gallery with my neighbor there were in fact two side galleries at two different depths, that the vole had taken care of camouflage by blocking it a little. I caught the beast in these very horizontal galleries.
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by stephgouv » 19/05/20, 15:47

Did67 wrote:Ah yes, suggest that they grow artichokes! It's so easy and good !!!

How everyone laughs in turn!

Hey, did you ever think about having one stuffed? it will not on the shelf in your office : Lol:
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by stephgouv » 19/05/20, 23:00

What if it was really due to the cold that the onions cut up?
Looks like they're getting better right?
20200519_190503.jpg
Were the onions cold?

And one less mole rat! He's the one who ate my salads.
20200519_180109.jpg
One less!

Magnification photo of my winter veil
20200519_181742.jpg
Wintering veil

The first plants are transplanted. And without watering.
20200519_184346.jpg
Pepper, pineapple tomato, cucumber and eggplant
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Adrien (ex-nico239)
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by Adrien (ex-nico239) » 19/05/20, 23:08

Bravo for the mole rat.
It looks like P17 which is more of a forcing veil than wintering.
Maybe buying P30 will be more protective.
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by Did67 » 19/05/20, 23:14

stephgouv wrote:What if it was really due to the cold that the onions cut up?


With me, they cash without flinching! Even a terrine carelessly placed dehros ... Or the plants from bulbils, which are a bit like yours ...
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by stephgouv » 20/05/20, 10:28

Adrien (ex-nico239) wrote:Bravo for the mole rat.
It looks like P17 which is more of a forcing veil than wintering.
Maybe buying P30 will be more protective.

Thanks for the advice!
When I bought it at the time I did not know much about it and therefore probably that sails were on sale in a garden center and that I took these. Why???

Oh yes! I remember it now! This veil was used on my strawberry plants and therefore effectively, it is indeed a forcing veil.
What a ball I am! But hey, as the other would say, it was perhaps better than nothing ...
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by stephgouv » 20/05/20, 10:32

Did67 wrote:
stephgouv wrote:What if it was really due to the cold that the onions cut up?


With me, they cash without flinching! Even a terrine carelessly placed dehros ... Or the plants from bulbils, which are a bit like yours ...

Regarding onions, how do they grow? Because mine have large leaves, but when I spread the hay, the bulb does not seem to grow very quickly ... it's been almost 3 months since they were planted.
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Re: The vegetable garden without getting tired




by Did67 » 20/05/20, 11:41

Do not worry ! Plants first form their vegetative apparatus. Then "accumulate": fill bulbs, roots, tubers, fruits ...

Note that the onion bulb (future) is the base of the leaf which will have swelled and "filled". And so rejoice in having big leaves. Many. These are the future bulbs!

I did not "scratch". I think that with me, there is, at this stage, ONLY SLAB !!!
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