My kitchen garden of the least effort

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
Moindreffor
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Moindreffor » 24/07/20, 17:59

transplanting row beans, to be continued, this is my first attempt, one meter high wire mesh, but 2m stake so possible to extend it if necessary

I start to store my bulbils of yellow onions, the tails dry very slowly, those transplanted are taken back, will they develop, we will see

the beets also transplanted very late, all resumed, even with little watering, the roots fill up and the foliage develops again, in the rest of the very small plants thrown in surface composting, then covered by something else , a plant points the tip of its nose, like what Didier is right the beetroot is indestructible, but isn't that the case with many vegetables?
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Did67
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Did67 » 24/07/20, 18:59

The beet has, in addition, a root packed with energy. You let a beet, its dead leaves dry out, you pull them out, you replant the "flagada" root and it leaves! Exactly for the same reason that rumex or a thistle "pierces" hay! The reserves are in the root ...

In the living, always look at the energy! Is there energy? How many ? Where is she ?
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Julienmos
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Julienmos » 24/07/20, 22:18

Did67 wrote:The beet has, in addition, a root packed with energy. You let a beet, its dead leaves dry out, you pull them out, you replant the "flagada" root and it leaves!


I had told last year that one (of?) mole rat completely scorched the leaves of the red beets (stored at the entrance of its gallery, under a board next to it), but new leaves grew back and I had harvested quite correct beets!
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Moindreffor » 26/07/20, 10:37

it rained last night, owl !!! we've been waiting for this in the area for a long time
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Did67 » 26/07/20, 10:43

I only had the wind !!!!
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by stephgouv » 26/07/20, 11:07

Moindreffor wrote:it rained last night, owl !!! we've been waiting for this in the area for a long time

Yes, good downpour overnight and a little more this morning.
We announce hot tomorrow (25-27c °) and around 20-22c ° the rest of the week. it will grow!
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Moindreffor
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Moindreffor » 26/07/20, 11:20

stephgouv wrote:
Moindreffor wrote:it rained last night, owl !!! we've been waiting for this in the area for a long time

Yes, good downpour overnight and a little more this morning.
We announce hot tomorrow (25-27c °) and around 20-22c ° the rest of the week. it will grow!

yes I also looked at the weather forecast, it must have grown, stains on the tomato leaves we will have to remove that
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by stephgouv » 26/07/20, 11:32

Moindreffor wrote:
stephgouv wrote:
Moindreffor wrote:it rained last night, owl !!! we've been waiting for this in the area for a long time

Yes, good downpour overnight and a little more this morning.
We announce hot tomorrow (25-27c °) and around 20-22c ° the rest of the week. it will grow!

yes I also looked at the weather forecast, it must have grown, stains on the tomato leaves we will have to remove that

For me, the leaves of the potatoes are starting to have spots. I will post photo.
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Did67
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Did67 » 26/07/20, 12:02

At home, both! And already powdery mildew like almost never !!!
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Doris
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Re: My kitchen garden of the least effort




by Doris » 26/07/20, 17:43

Is that so? Me it's none of that, no powdery mildew or mildew (yes, a few minor attacks at the end of the cool nights, two weeks ago), and above all no rain, nothing serious in sight at least until August 8, nothing at all !!!
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