Food gardening

Well, it appears the cherry tree made it through its first winter. I planted a cherry tree late summer early fall-ish 2022. Spring 2033 rolled around and nothing. Dead. I had purchased the insurance from Fast Trees dot com, so they sent me another. I should have kept track, but I took a chance and planted the new one same spot maybe end of June, 2023. It currently has green buds on it. Awesome. Stella Cherry, self pollinating, sweet. I did no winter dormancy pruning. I may prune this summer, but will likely wait until next February. Prune to maintain height and get a spread.

The "Fruit Cocktail" tree is apparently loving where it is. They don't label it and don't do requests for those trees, you get what you get. Mine only has two varieties, stone fruit. The smaller graft didn't do jack last year as far as flowering, just a little, and was small. Worried me, I don't know if whatever I have of the two depends on the other for pollination. The main part of the tree is loaded with pink blossoms and buds, I'm thinking peach, maybe nectarine? The smaller graft has little white flowers, I'm hoping plums. Could be apricot for all I know, which I guess is alright. Both flowered but no fruit last year. We'll see.

The two 3-in-1 apple trees survived quite well the heavy pruning I did last summer. In a way I didn't much care either way. Damn Cedar Apple rust, im going to have to spray them several times each spring. Well, 3 times, following a suggested schedule. Spring only when cedar trees produce those orange galls(sp?) and release spores.....infecting apple trees up to ten miles away. I've considered planting apples that are immune or resistant, yet less desirable I suppose. Currently, one tree has Gala, Granny Smith, and Fuji. The other Gala, Granny Smith, and Red Delicious.

Trees I'm considering, hazelnut, fig, perhaps peach or pear. A pecan(or two because if I am not mistaken they need a pollinator) would be cool, but I think they take 7-10 years before they produce, and given I don't think they are available in semi dwarf it would probably be nuts for me to be climbing a tree for nuts at 71 yrs old.

Anyway, I'm thrilled the cherry tree survived, frankly I had my doubts. Cherry blossoms in the spring, cherries in the summer, right in my own front yard, how awesome is that.

Oh, the wife was reading something about keeping the birds off fruit, I think it was more about apples. Hang plastic Christmas balls in the tree, red, green, whatever. The birds get bored, disappointed, discouraged pecking at them and move on. I don't know, sounds like something that would work better in theory than in practice.

You guys gearing up for spring planting?
 
You have to sing to them(hint: you expell oxygen when you sing). Root rot, maybe over watering, pour soil drainage, or both?

edit, not oxygen, that other stuff what they want and need.
 
You have to sing to them(hint: you expell oxygen when you sing). Root rot, maybe over watering, pour soil drainage, or both?

edit, not oxygen, that other stuff what they want and need.
I suspect it already had it by the time I bought it. The pot had poor drainage. Then the pot I bought to repot it also had poor drainage. And I can’t really find a good soil for bonsai in brick and mortar here. I’ll have to buy online.
 
I'm trying to get some pits from my cherry tree to sprout, but so far, nothing is showing. My dwarf Montmorency is getting weak, several larger branches have died out. I have a dogwood in the back yard that has been dying for years. I'm considering putting a Montmorency in the back yard in place of the dogwood, and maybe a NorthStar cherry dwarf in the front.

I've planted some ghost pepper seeds as well... waiting for those to sprout. Another week or so and I'll plant the tomato seeds.

You can tell it's spring, I've already cut the grass once, sprayed for the chickweed that's popping up, and laid down the fertilizer.
 
It took a year for the Razzies to take over the growing space..both golden and red growing together..runners all everywhere.Should produce all summer long.
Blue berries are an unimpressive lot. the middle one survived winter with nothing on top. two on the side are cheap 2 quart plants from hardware store. I see a few flowers.
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grown in fortified composted yard waste and ashes from the burn pit. mulch sprinkled on top to seal in moisture and help stop weeds.
Tomato and green pepper planted. gonna try green beans too.
 
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Where do you live? I haven't even tilled the garden yet. May 15th until we are generally frost safe. I'm hunting up cowshit now. The apple and peaches are getting ready to bloom/leaf. Very soon now.
 
Where do you live?
Upper Illinois..South of Wauconda. Almost 2 years now bought a midwestern cottage.
I haven't even tilled the garden yet. May 15th until we are generally frost safe.
I started first thaw like March 2nd the soil was so soft. Poke your finger and drop it in. Things like raddishes and carrots are quick , and can go again and again all summer
I'm hunting up cowshit now.
home depot has bags of "cow-moo-newer" thats what I used to fortify the soil.
The apple and peaches are getting ready to bloom/leaf. Very soon now.
My cherry tree is full of em' now! In late fall I trimmed off all the dead branches and suckers. Boom this year she came back blooming! Cherries!!
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I guess if you look at a globe you are definitely south of New Hampshire. Zone 6 vs. Zone 4 or 5. The zones may keep their numbers but the average lows are higher now.
 
It's time to plant the MJ outdoors for the wife.

Anyone here have more experience than I? It's been hit or miss for me here in Colorado.

Ordered some feminized seeds online this year instead of from a local source. Last time I got either root rot (seedlings) or the second batch got stressed and only 3 of 9 were female. Then it was late in the season for them to fully mature...

I am focusing more on soil amendments and timing this year.
 
For the wife... ya ya :D
Yeah man, I don't really like the high from weed. I was a wake and bake guy in Jr High school. One day it just didn't feel right so I quit.

I will obviously test what I grow, but seriously I am not fond of being high. Rather a beer. or 6. lol! Plus it makes me eat everything in the fridge and my belly doesn't need any help there...

So seriously, more for my wife's sanity than mine. Plus, its way cheaper to grow than buy.
 
My weed is in, had it growing in the basement since January under lights. They have a good head start. Some veggies are in, need to put more. The apple, plum and peach trees all are beginning to bear fruit. I should get another 300 pears out of the big pear tree again. The first year I was here it didn't bear any fruit but neither did anyone else. They are the largest best tasting pears I have ever had, yellow. Some were almost the size of a softball! .
 
Heck yeah, food gardening thread active!

More to say/add later. Enjoying what you guys have to say, going on. More, please.
 
I don't know if I posted this? I was about to buy a yard trailer to tow behind the lawn tractor I bought last year. I go to the dump with the trash and there is an old wheelchair there missing the front wheels with no seat, basically just the frame with the big wheels. I knew I had 8 heavy duty 360 degree swivel casters at home and a brand new 3/4 diameter pillow block bearing. I figured I could make a trailer out of this. It even has breaks! It works pretty good. I have added some side rails since. I was thinking of mounting an old dog cage on it but don't know how sturdy they are? I never put a dog in a cage. I could make it quick release where I could pop it on and off? I could make it out of old PVC. There are four 3/4 inch diameter tubes in the corners I could mount either right over or into. If you blow up the pics you can see them. I have a huge collection of all kinds of nuts and bolts from fifty years of machining.
 

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What purpose would the dog cage serve? Also see if you can change out the wheels for bicycle wheels. Wider - better on soft ground. Good grab though. It'll do.
 
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