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Old May 2, 2008   #1
GIZZARDFARM
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Default Fish guts...

Last year while reviewing some of my great grand mothers notes i came across an interesting garden tip. She had a neighbor named Tom Crow..Tom was a Full Cherokee and she spoke of him each year putting fish heads and guts fom a days catch in the mater hole while planting, so being the old school i am I tried it out with a few plants and to my surprise really helped plants. My son and I caught a mess of 17 trout today and i used the remains under 17 boxcar willies,brandyboys and cherokee purples. Has anyone else tried this and what has been your experiences???? Gizzard
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Old May 2, 2008   #2
robin303
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Hi Gizzard, This lady does it and it is somewhere in here in her site. Just got to browse awhile:
http://www.growbetterveggies.com/
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Old May 3, 2008   #3
Biscombe
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Good article! thanks for that..

She also says put 2 asprin in the planting hole! Anyone tried this?
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Old May 3, 2008   #4
lakeshorenc
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If you have many racoons in your area they will toss the tomato plant to the side and eat the fish. Theresa
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Old May 3, 2008   #5
dice
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Whole fish is good plant food. It is also good raccoon food,
so one may wish to put some traps around if using it.

Someone, either here or at GW, mentioned one time that
he buried a bunch of fish under a mound of something,
and turkey buzzards showed up, tore out the crop, and
dug out the fish.
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Old May 5, 2008   #6
Patapsco Mike
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I did this last year, and raccoons dug up all the plants that had the fish heads/guts under them- destroying the plants in the process. Glad I hadn't caught that many fish...
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Old May 5, 2008   #7
Tomstrees
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Sure have !
I live less than a mile for the Bay-shore (our own beach) - so when we catch weakfish, bluefish, and stripers (keeper size of course), I gut em and either dig into my garden - or - dump them into my compost pile ...

You have to be careful: dig them in SUPER deep - as one time, I had my dog running around my back yard with a half-rotten Bluefish head in his mouth !

GROSS !

~ Tom

ps. FISH ON !
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Old May 5, 2008   #8
jungseed
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I just hope your support system is in place before you put the plants in the ground. The plants grow fast when you use fish for fertilizer.
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Old May 5, 2008   #9
Worth1
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I don't have anything against using fish in this way but I think the fire ants would have a ball.

Worth
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Old May 5, 2008   #10
bate181
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has anyone tried feeding plants fish oil?
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Old May 5, 2008   #11
robin303
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I use fish emulsion which you get in a gal for about $11at Lowe's and I make it weak and use when I water. Haven't really noticed anything except my cat really likes me now.
Stinky stuff may I add.
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Old May 5, 2008   #12
loveapplefarm
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Hi all. I'm the one that posted those instructions on growing tomatoes on my blog. I have at least 8 racoons living on my property and three dogs. I've had more trouble with my dogs digging up the fish than racoons. But the ONLY time I had the dogs doing it was when I instructed someone else to bury some of the left-over fish heads we get from our restaurant account, and she only stuck them in the ground a couple inches. No wonder the dogs dug them up.

When I put fish heads in the bottom of my tomato planting holes, the holes are two feet deep. I also put a bunch of other stuff in the hole (including the aspirin, which is for blossom production and helping the plant jump start its immune system). I don't just rely on fish to fertilize my tomatoes. If I did, I'd get a whole lot of beautiful green growth and not enough fruit.

For info on the aspirin, you can go here: http://www.biology-online.org/articl...e_systems.html
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Old May 5, 2008   #13
robin303
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Welcome again Cynthia, I posted that article of yours way back on Perry’s on Humic Acid in which you responded. I brag about your site quite often. It’s not only inspirational but also like a gardening bible to me and others. Sure wish you had online courses or blogs for all the things that you teach. Thanks for your website.
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Old May 5, 2008   #14
GIZZARDFARM
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I have lots of coons around here and Im on day 3 and havent had any plants dug up yet keeping my fingers crossed....I did post several piles of heads and guts around the interior of the garden on top of the ground as a distraction maybe its working....
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Old May 6, 2008   #15
dice
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Gizzard: if you had an infrared camera out there recording
to a slow tape, you could find out what they are doing at
night.

Fish is one of their natural foods, one reason they are so
attracted to it. Out here they like to hang out on the
banks of creeks and fill up on spawned out salmon when
the salmon are running.
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