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Joined 8 months ago
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Cake day: February 4th, 2024

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  • I went to a panel presentation on the early colonies around the Revolution once. When they took questions, I asked if there was any special logistical problems Virginia ran into after due to how large the territory was and man, they treated me like a fuckin idiot. I still think about that. It’s not, like, important or anything I just don’t have a therapist for this sort of shit








  • Bummer.

    I’m gonna go with either spider mites or fungus/bacteria. Probably the latter like one of the leaf spots or possibly downy mildew, though it seems a bit deep into summer for downy. That last picture has some pinpoints of color on the leaf that look like they could be spider mite damage, but I’d still put the safe money on a leaf spot. This far along, you’d be able to easily find them if they’re there.

    Get what you can from it all, maybe hit it with some neem once a week to see if that’ll slow down the decline, but I think that’s just gonna be cucurbit hospice.







  • ThrowawaySobriquet@lemmy.worldOPtoGardening@lemmy.worldTaters at Dawn
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    3 months ago

    Yup! As was said, they’re just cattle fence made into round cages. The bottoms I lined with some landscaping fabric for a growing medium (75/25 compost/soil) and planted the potatoes about half way down. From there I just mound up in straw.

    Edit: I forgot a few details. They’re held up on either side by t-posts. Nothing fancy, just driven in and wired to each post three times (top, center, bottom) for stability and support. I put sprinklers on the top because that’s what I had, though I do want to do something different in the future. I don’t like top watering, but I haven’t quite figured out how I wanna do it otherwise. I’m thinking a strand or two of drip that gets mounded up with the potato as it grows, but that’s experimenting for another time

    There’s some folks that will actually do a core of medium up the center for new potato roots to take hold in. I’m trying something that’s a little more fertilizer-intense, but easier to scale up. Little blood meal every couple weeks while they’re growing up then some 10-10-10 twice (once at the beginning and once again here in a bit).

    If I can make this work in my home garden, I’m hoping to tweak it a bit for larger scale. We’ll see