Le Potager du Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
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Julienmos
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Julienmos » 01/08/21, 14:54

Biobombe wrote:Are your celeriacs free from septoria?
As you do not have mildew you would not be affected maybe.
Here, I have often seen the mallow.


my celery doesn't seem sick, why?

(as regards the late blight of the tomato, it unfortunately also starts with me)
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Did67
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 01/08/21, 17:06

With me too, mallow is spontaneous ... But I do not know if it is this species?
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Ahmed » 01/08/21, 19:00

It must be wild mallow, a very common plant everywhere ...
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Biobomb
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Biobomb » 01/08/21, 23:00

Julienmos wrote:
Biobombe wrote:Are your celeriacs free from septoria?
As you do not have mildew you would not be affected maybe.
Here, I have often seen the mallow.


my celery doesn't seem sick, why?

(as regards the late blight of the tomato, it unfortunately also starts with me)


I see that qq feet are reached. Leave the mallow, you never know, it can do no harm.
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Adrien (ex-nico239)
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Adrien (ex-nico239) » 01/08/21, 23:51

Biobombe wrote:I see that qq feet are reached. Leave the mallow, you never know, it can do no harm.


Mallow isn't free from mildew, too ... or at least something like it.

Yum (and care) the mauve

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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Miaos » 04/08/21, 20:16

For mildew, I had nothing. The showers succeeding each other as naturally as the days of the week, it happened and it all zigzagged quite quickly. Not being the type to take the lead, I cut and made room for other cultures not concerned by this scourge.

On the other hand, I am surprised to have nothing on the zucchini, yet right next to it, and on the gogi which were much more affected last year despite the heat waves and the drought.
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by GuyGadeboisTheBack » 04/08/21, 21:12

Miaos wrote:On the other hand, I am surprised to have nothing on the zucchini, yet right next to it, and on the gogi which were much more affected last year despite the heat waves and the drought.

The opponents of organic will explain to you that it is because zucchini and gogi (?) Manufacture / produce their own "phytosanitary" products to protect themselves and that they are "certainly" as dangerous as the chemicals added / sprayed without ever having illustrated their words with any molecule that corresponds to their fantasy, not about their existence, but about their dangerousness / toxicity. : Cheesy:
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Adrien (ex-nico239)
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Adrien (ex-nico239) » 04/08/21, 21:33

Today rain and first day of closed chests for all those who contain tomatoes.

Tomorrow they announce mistral we will reopen ...
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Biobomb » 04/08/21, 22:34

Adrien (ex-nico239) wrote:Today rain and first day of closed chests for all those who contain tomatoes.

Tomorrow they announce mistral we will reopen ...


How many degrees at home this morning? Here, 11.
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Biobomb » 04/08/21, 22:39

Miaos wrote:
On the other hand, I am surprised to have nothing on the zucchini, yet right next to it, and on the gogi which were much more affected last year despite the heat waves and the drought.


Zucchini are very sensitive to powdery mildew. Les gogis, I don't know, what are they?
Here I have tomato plants affected by late blight next to plants that are 100% free.
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