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Home Garden Thread


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2022 Jul 30, 6:33pm   8,344 views  99 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (58)   💰tip   ignore  

How many of you all have gardens at home? We have a planter box with some tomatoes, arugula, peppers, and random other things that sprout from the compost we add. We compost the scraps from everything edible, and that seems to include a lot of seeds. Even parts of potatoes have grown into full potato plants. We got a few beets somehow as well.

We used to have chickens and enjoyed their eggs, but the need to let them out and put them in again each day makes it hard to go on vacations.



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77   Blue   2024 Feb 16, 3:57pm  

komputodo says


Patrick says


We have a planter box with some tomatoes, arugula,

great idea....life would be a bitch without my arugula.


Growing lot of flower plants, they attract bees and birds. With extra fun with weeds ;) grow veggies and fruits, its a kind of fun-stuff too.
79   stereotomy   2024 Feb 21, 11:36pm  

For those in the northeast:

https://wrongdirectionfarm.com/

In the middle of East Bumblefuck (AKA Canajoharie) NY

The ground beef isn't quite as good as Burgundy Beef in TX:

https://www.burgundypasturebeef.com/

These guys dry age the meat before they grind it, and it tastes awesome. These guys are strictly for TX and near TX, otherwise shipping is a killer.
80   RC2006   2024 Mar 4, 4:14pm  

Patrick says

Anyone have advice for how to get rid of gophers?

We have a planter they cannot get into, at least not so far, but it's small. The larger part of the yard has a very busy gopher though, and it eats a lot of our plants.


Gopher plants

Plant gopher spurge.

This plant, also known as "Euphorbia Lathyris," is a common gopher repellent.

My grandparents had major gopher problem, after planting the above gone forever. Be careful if you have dogs they are poisonous.
81   Robert Sproul   2024 Mar 5, 8:00am  

RC2006 says

Be careful if you have dogs they are poisonous.

I think this stuff works but you need to be aware the plant can be kind of hazardous. My wife had a bad dermatitis reaction from the milk in the stem. Neither of us knew and took no precaution.

"All parts of Euphorbia lathyris are poisonous if ingested and can cause severe irritation to the skin and eyes upon contact. The milky sap contains compounds that can cause blistering and dermatitis. It is toxic to humans, dogs, and cats, and care should be taken to prevent accidental ingestion or contact."
86   RWSGFY   2024 Mar 28, 8:05am  

Carbon footprint of homegrown food five times greater than those grown conventionally

The study found individual garden infrastructure responsible for increased levels of CO2

Joe Pinkstone, Science Correspondent 22 January 2024 • 8:02pm

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/01/22/carbon-footprint-homegrown-food-allotment-increase/
87   HeadSet   2024 Mar 28, 8:48am  

RWSGFY says

Carbon footprint of homegrown food five times greater than those grown conventionally

Good. With that extra CO2 the tomatoes and beans will grow better.
89   richwicks   2024 Mar 28, 11:22am  

RWSGFY says

Carbon footprint of homegrown food five times greater than those grown conventionally


Sure, and the vaccines are safe and effective, the glaciers disappeared 5 years ago, and Ukraine will win the war any day now.
90   NuttBoxer   2024 Mar 28, 11:44am  

RWSGFY says


Carbon footprint of homegrown food five times greater than those grown conventionally

The study found individual garden infrastructure responsible for increased levels of CO2

Joe Pinkstone, Science Correspondent 22 January 2024 • 8:02pm

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/01/22/carbon-footprint-homegrown-food-allotment-increase/


I'd like to help summarize Joe's points a little more clearly. By conventionally he means food industry. Spraying the ground with poison, planting it with invasive GMO breeds, spraying again, and allowing that poison to spread over miles into families homes and children's lungs. Cultivating e-coli through pollution and waste, spreading it into the ground water, and leaving the land dead and barren.

Since I live in Yuma, and not far from El Centro, I've noticed a significant increase in child diseases and mental disorders. There's a correlation, which is why I've made sure we only live in areas at least two miles away from the fields.

Joe wants you to think cultivating your soil, making yourself healthier, and taking money away from industrial operations is bad. Clearly Joe has some issues...
91   Patrick   2024 Mar 28, 9:02pm  

RWSGFY says

Carbon footprint of homegrown food


Carbon shmarbon.
92   WookieMan   2024 Mar 29, 8:50am  

Patrick says

RWSGFY says


Carbon footprint of homegrown food


Carbon shmarbon.

Carbon is a trace element. I worry more about an ice age than anything. Warming would open up vast swaths of land that could grow enormous amounts of food that already is unpopulated, as in unusable land currently. Warming would be good.

The rise in temperature would be trivial in places that already grow crops. I'm in the 10# camp on this, we have gravity and the oceans don't have a pool liner. The crust is porous at the ocean floor. Added water from ice is added pressure and is pushed into the crust. Was just down in FL and nothing has changed water level wise since I was 5 about 35 years ago. Zilch. We're talking hurricanes and barrier islands that are basically sand bars above sea level. According the climate idiots these islands should be gone by now. They're not.
99   krc   2024 May 2, 8:17pm  

Patrick says

it's work to put them in the coop each night

Automatic door opener with a light sensor. Opens up a couple of hours after sun up, closes at dark.
There are several kits out there and pretty easy to install.

Still - can be a hassle. Had to put a fence around garden to keep chickens out, and another one because they
got into the main back yard and were pooping on the pool deck. Then you need to build a run, with a coop for laying
inside as well... And... And... LOL

Plus where there are chicken coops there are rats.

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