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lavender

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Posts posted by lavender

  1. If the sprays aren't working the next step is a physical barrier. We have a plastic netting that we throw over things. It came from Lowes. Chicken wire works as well. Most animals aren't smart enough to get around the flimsiest barriers.

  2. 3 hours ago, steelnut said:

    We have a big garden and I'm not even going to suggest to hubby burying the fence, lol! I want to try the ammonia method. Is the only way using cloths? Would spraying it around the perimeter, like I do Liquid Fence work?

    I've done that too. Ammonia doesn't seem to kill grass or anything else. It probably lasts a bit longer on a cloth. I don't think I've ever seen it recommended anywhere I just made it up out of pure desperation. Animals have very sensitive noses and ammonia is awful.

  3. The only way to really keep rabbits out is to bury fencing 6 inches to a foot deep around the garden. They apparently won't dig deeper than that. It isn't very practical if you have a large garden. We have had some success with ammonia. Tying saturated cloths at nose level will over ride the scent of that yummy lettuce and beans. It works for coons and corn too but it has to be renewed frequently. Anything that confuses an animal's ability to scent food works. They rely on their noses.

  4. Steelnut, put in new trees! We are ancient and just put in a bunch. Get the semi-dwart. Hanzley's says they will be producing in a few years. If you aren't there to pick the deer and your neighbors will love you. You are never too old to plant a tree.

    Some things hate my yard too. Mostly it is poor drainage. We live with it.

  5. Building on Sanibel's idea there are all sorts of azaleas. Some are evergreen and some are deciduous. These varieties are native to different climates and have different degrees of cold tolerance and heat tolerance.  Then there are the hybrids so it is difficult to know how hardy an azalea actually is unless you bought it with a tag. It is entirely possible that you hit close to the tolerance range of your azalea. Bon's suggestions are good ones and hopefully it will pull through.

    All of my azaleas have survived the past winters except one miniature one. I recently picked up one on sale at Loew's but should have known better. It looked as though the frost had hit it. When I started to plant it I looked at the tag and it is only hardy to zone 6. I'm not expecting it to survive for many years. Maybe I'll get lucky and the roots will make it through.

  6. Lettuce is huge this year. We are getting "volunteers" that start very early and are much bigger than the planted rows. No bolting yet. The spinach has bolted though. Kale is doing nicely. The red Russian variety stays tender all summer and can be used in salads.

  7. Pine needles are excellent but they will take some time to break down. A bucket of Miracid or something similar would be a quick fix if your soil is too alkaline or the plant needs some nitrogen.  The mulch will take longer to fix the problem. .  Also, if you moved the plant into soil that doesn't drain very well the roots might not be getting the air they need.

  8. Azaleas need special fertilizers formulated for acid loving plants. You could try mulching with wood chips and pruning after it blooms. Like many plants azaleas deteriorate with age. I have a yellow one that is probably 25 years old and it isn't what it once was. I keep trying to bring it back but I don't think that it is going to happen.

  9. The dreaded cabbage worm strikes again. Soon there will be little white butterflies everywhere. Nothing really works permanently, for me anyway. You kill off the current batch and another generation follows. Soaking the broccoli in salt water before you cook it gets rid of them before you put it on the table. Still it helps to watch what you put in your mouth.

    PS Great looking garden. Tell us how you keep the weeds out? I've kind of given up on ever killing them all off.

  10. Mine looks ok so far despite the fact that we planted in mud. This wet weather is encouraging the growth of all sorts of fungus, bacteria and virus. My spiderwort is turning black and dying off and I suspect a virus. The snails and slugs are also encouraged by the rain. I think cutworms only go after plants that they can cut off at the ground.  I don't think that they climb very well. Maybe slugs or snails. Regular insecticides don't kill them. Chipmunks and mice have their own agendas. The birds have only gotten my corn never the peppers .They also have been known to nip the tops out of the pea plants.  I finished planting today. There were sections of the garden that were so wet you couldn't walk on them. What grows remains to be seen.

  11. The 22 works but a groundhog hating dog works better. Dang groundhogs come out at dawn and dinner time. Not the most convenient to go stalking. They will dig under the fence unless you sink it. They can also climb. Saw one up a tree a couple of times. First time I thought I was hallucinating. If the fence will hold them they will climb it.

  12. No, you don't start beans in the house!They go from seed to bean in such a short time that you can often get two crops. Stuff that needs a longer growing season like tomatoes is started indoors. I only start the squash and cucumbers indoors because something keeps eating the seeds.

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