Comfort Zone: Techniques to practice to keep your bubble big
WORM GOLD PLUS | Organic Garden Fertilizer For Your Fruits And Vegetables
Our ultra-premium worm castings are produced by worms fed a specific diet rich in chitin, producing castings with an elevated level of recycling organisms called ...
Thank you for your inquiry, let me answer you the best I can. I don't know
John personally, however as an Authorized Boogie Brew dealer, I have
permission to use John's Videos that are also on the Boogie Brew site. As
far as not being able to reach Boogie Brew for potential question's, I do
apologize for that. I know Josh personally, (amazing man) and I can tell
you that he puts his heart and soul into everything he does, but like most
growing businesses, he has a hard time getting everything done on a daily
bases. However, I will do the very best to answer any and all question
about there product to the best of my ability.
I raised this very question to myself and I can tell you from personal
experience, this product, as with all Boogie Brew products are nothing
short of Amazing.
"The proof" expect to see in the next few months "Before and After"
videos using their products right here in our test gardens. There is even
talk about John featuring us in a feature episode of Grow Your Greens.
Expect to see many Boogie Brew products made exclusively for GRANNY'S WORM
FARM Youtube Viewers as well as for website only deals.
Thank you again for your questions and feel free to ask me anything.
Josh is NOT hard to get ahold of.And WHO are you?...... And who is Granny??
Top 10 Tropical Fruit Trees You Must Grow if You Live in the Tropics
John from //www.growingyourgreens.com/ shares with you his top 10 favorite sweet fruit trees he would grow if he lived in the tropics, such as South Florida, ...
Ok. I gotcha Linda, it's a big bonus to have free and low cost resources at your disposal. If I had to buy my garden inputs, I would have to cut the size of it down considerably.
I am referring to the crazy amounts this man spends on his garden in total. I save all my seeds, amend my soil, but have a rotor tilled garden, not a raised bed. I can,t afford all of his advice!
+pj snedeker Plant them separately not so far apart , they will naturally spread, ( they are clump growers ) so give room for the new plants to come up.
+thewhitewolf It's a small garden…I bought these things called "jackpots" (fabric pots) that I can put anywhere, so, the anti-garden anti-food growing HOA police would have to be in my backyard to see it. The mango tree they obviously can see over the fence since it was about 15 feet tall… it was a Cogshall, I miss it :(
+Quantum yes, the winter so far has been rather mild, it seems. this does not necessarily mean that it will stay this way. you should check temperature-statistics for your area for, say, the last 20 years.here are some of the lowest temperatures which have been measured in germany://www.wetterdienst.de/Klima/Wetterrekorde/Deutschland/Temperatur/Min/as you can see, most of these were measured a long time ago, but in the wetterpark offenbach it dropped to -17,5 as recently as 2009.
+Quantum check how low the temperatures can get in your area. choose your plants accordingly.of course you can experiment with plants that are just on the verge of winter hardiness, using frost protection fleece and/or making use of the microclimates in your garden (e.g. planting at a south-facing house wall). nowadays winters tend to be not as cold as 100 years ago, given the climate change. however, if the temperature does drop to -15 or -20, it will most likely kill your exotic plants.i personally would stick to completely hardy plants. paw-paw is certainly a rather exotic fruit. or, if i wanted non-hardy plants, i would plant them in containers, and move them indoors, if the temperatures drop below zero.
+Quantum That is the downside they take a lot of space. I currently have my male and female trellised on a retaining wall that is about 9 feet tall and 15 feet long, whatever that is in meters.
+trubux some varieties can hol up to - 18°C but it says only for short period of time. Are there any varieties that i could plant in the garden with having to protect them against frost?
+Quantum only if you live on helgoland or in an area with a similar climate. there seems to be just one grapefruit cultivar, which might be able to tolerate slight frost: bloomsweet//www.agrumi-voss.de/index.php/anmeldung/frosthaerte-ranglistesee also https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frostharte_Zitruspflanzen
+pj snedeker Sorry, I do not know the exact mango varieties they grow. As for more exotic fruit you can grow in zone 7-8 I would go with the standard Kiwi. My 2 vines are over 20 years old and they have survived many frosts being fully exposed.
+Quantum some american and asian plants should do well in most parts of germany without protection:paw-paw (asimina triloba), arctic kiwi (actinidia arguta), also other small-fruited kiwis like a. kolomikta and a. melanandra, american persimmon (diospyros virginiana), date-plum (diospyros lotus), jujube (ziziphus jujuba), kousa dogwood (cornus kousa), honeyberry (lonicera caerulea), trifoliate orange (poncirus trifoliata), ...note that the fruit of the trifoliate orange is often regarded as inedible, but as far as i know it can be used for jam and juice.others like kiwi, kaki, figs, pomegranate, ... should be also suitable, if you can find frost-hardy varieties.
+Quantum they will fruit, if the stems are several years old and they are kept frost-free. however, the fruits will be seedy. the typical way to grow these cold-tolerant bananas, is to cut the plant above ground and to protect the rhizome against frost. if everything goes well, they will shoot again in spring, but they will not bear fruit. typical desert bananas like cavendish are not frost-hardy. they have to be overwintered inside.for tips on bananas in germany see bananenhobby.de.
I wanted to grow them from seeds because no one sells mango varietied here. In an organic store i could get a very small mango variety, i think its the wild mango.
+Quantum larger full grown trees can survive light frost, you will get a lot of burnt leaves, but they usually grow back. Mango is really a Sub-tropical plant not full tropical. If you live in an area that gets the occasional cold front. I recommend planting a variety that is easily kept small, and cover your tree on that cold night. variety I would recommend is called "Pickering". In worst case situation, you can just keep it in container, and just roll it in the garage on that cold night.
+Quantum If you do try to grow a mango tree, keep it small, and cover it when it frost. I live in zone 8 in California and I know some people who do this and have been successful.
+Quantum you cannot grow mangos in germany in the garden (only in a wintergarden or greenhouse).you can try to grow other more or less frost-hardy exotic plants outdoors:paw-paw, blue passion flower, yellow passionflower, maypop, kiwi, arctic kiwi, kaki, american persimmon, figs, jujube, pomegranate, sichuan pepper, japanese banana, darjeeling banana, trifoliate orange, ...some might require winter protection. you might want to contact a local nursery, and ask for varieties suitable for your climate.
+VOTE4TAJ okay, i want to plant some here in germany, one day this year we had 16 °C in december and frost about - 1 Celsius Will they tolerate more frost till they are bigger? Do you know how much frost oranges can withstand? Maybe you can tell me a tropical fruit that tolerates frost good?
Only to a small degree, -3C or 27F should be ok. Depending upon your location dwarf trees can be protected by covering or having Christmas tree lights (non-LED) around the tree in sever frost days.
Grow Tropical Edible Herbs, Fruits and Vegetables Where it Snows!
John from //www.growingyourgreens.com/ goes on a field trip to Como Park in St Paul, MN to share with you the tropical and sub tropical edible herbs, ...
Me three! Very expensive living, high taxes, mosquito invasions, way to much winter and only 3 of the 4 seasons. Stick with Iowa, far nicer! & John, Vegas is nice but again 3 of the 4 seasons...you keep it, I'll take Iowa.
You can get it at most Indian Grocery stores in the produce section. They have 2 kinds, the orange kind and the light yellow. Both look similar to ginger. I am sure you can plant them like ginger.
+Laura White And now the biggest dummy....I didn't say you need a backyard to grow food........read the whole post you moron...I'm not going to spoon-feed it to you...
+Hugh Janus limited as fuck thinking - we could end this entire solar system if we decided to with properly triggered detonations and sufficient calculations and this nigga telling me shit like '' not every one has a backyard'' well not every one is retarded either use your damn mind and manifest your reality.
doing the math, as a young twenty something i dish out 5000-6000$ a year on food alone, i believe 90% of my diet is raw? 20-30k dropped on a greenhouse on a backyard would save me money on food after 4 years depending on the order or if i build it myself.
Seed Catalog, Garden Seeds, Fruit Trees, Vegetable Seeds Romance
Seed and nursery america's most complete seed and . , . . . . Save now with free coupons and huge discounts on seed and plants. Gurney's specializes in ...