- Joined
- Dec 8, 2017
- Messages
- 11,863
Rodale press.
I wonder if it still in print.
Rodale press.
Was that one of the government info guide?
Those look great!!Hubby finished all my new garden "beds" and have them set up. Can't wait till next year to use them.
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Those are really lovely, he did a great job.Hubby finished all my new garden "beds" and have them set up. Can't wait till next year to use them.
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Keep us posted!I reviewed a bunch of video about rooting elderberry cuttings. I am guessing my previous attempts using pitting soil failed because it didn't drain well enough.
So I switched my method. I let the cutting sit in jars of water until I saw the buds starting to open. About a week. I transfered most if the cuttings to sand since many videos showed better results in sand. If it works as I hope I will be checking for roots near the end of next month.
I am going to try the above method for English walnut cuttings.
Ben
I can't answer that question. In this house The Princess purchases the trees and am supposed to keep them alive.I have not tried it, but everyone that I know who has, say it is easy.
Most of them use sand, what variety are you rooting?
I tilled my soil four or five different times to keep the grass from regrowing(if that is a real word).
Today I used a bottom plow to turn it because my rotary tiller only goes six inches & the apple trees need twelve
inch of loose soil.
No, but we have a cultivator that is Spring loaded that my brother says will go deeper than a dish harrow, but I never used it. This field has not been plowed for twenty year, I cut the timber off it & let the trash & stumps rot for four years. Love to have a chisel plow, but my 45 horsepower Kubota may not do as well as a standard tractor.After all the harvests are done I run the gang disk over the garden as often as it takes to keep grass or weeds going to seed. Sometimes twice a month until winter.
Do you have a subsoiler aka chisel plow? They dig deeper than a bottom plow. I run a chisel plow over my pastures and fields every 3 or 4 years. It really helps when I get heavy rains, lets them soak in.
Here's a chisel plow I built decades ago in trade school. Bottom... a pasture after I ran a chisel over it. You can just make out the marks in the grass. A chisel is only about 2" wide.
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No, but we have a cultivator that is Spring loaded that my brother says will go deeper than a dish harrow, but I never used it. This field has not been plowed for twenty year, I cut the timber off it & let the trash & stumps rot for four years. Love to have a chisel plow, but my 45 horsepower Kubota may not do as well as a standard tractor.
I do have a horse drawn hay rake & mower just like the one you have.
Is more or less what my dad has, minus the pipe layer. Does a good job with my 32 HP Duetz. Even better with his 52hp JDSingle Tine Ripper Subsoiler with Pipe Layer
Regular price$349.99
https://palletforks.com/products/3-...clid=ADL-b7e99de3-ca0d-4701-a162-6e7892b83950
This may work, it is a subsoiler, pipe/wire layer & can be used with a middle buster sweep.
Is that Joe in the picture??I thought I'd post this pic again my hayfield/pasture by the road. This was done with the subsoiler, not my chisel plow.
You can see it barely tears up the sod, an occasional chunk will come up. But it's barely noticeable.
Right after this pic I got a big rain, over 3 inches... Normally that much water will stand above the terraces you can see in the bottom pic (same field, different angle). The water will flow to the end of the terraces and out of the field.
After using the subsoiler I got no standing water. All that rain soaks deep into the soil.
After cattle walk over the same pasture for years it gets hard packed. Rain will shed off, not soak in. That's why I like having the subsoiler. I run it every 3 or 4 years. The grass grows much better. It'll tolerate a dry summer better because all of the winter rain soaks in.
Again... the two toe subsoiler is a load for my 48hp massey to pull. But it will pull it...
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What kind of chilies are the long skinny ones?
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