Discuss your tips, tricks and experiences growing and selling vegetables, fruits, flowers, plants and herbs.
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February 23, 2012 | #16 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Bordentown NJ
Posts: 32
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augiedog55's suggestion to check out the "grow bag again" thread in the container forum is a great one. I just read through it and there is a wealth of experience from people who are actively growing in bags.
http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=21162 Edited to say: Whoops, I mean people who are actively growing tomatoes in bags. Last edited by NisiNJ; February 23, 2012 at 05:42 PM. Reason: explained in text |
February 23, 2012 | #17 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Whidbey Island, WA Zone 7, Sunset 5
Posts: 931
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MileHighGuy, in order to help us better inform you, please tell us what is your area of expertise: Small business set-up or tomato growing?
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February 23, 2012 | #18 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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My Area of Expertise is in Business and Sales.
I however have lot's of gardening and farming experience. I've always built business's and taken jobs related to the income. Now at the ripe old age of 28, I've decided that I'll do what I love to do and not worry about the money. I make enough now to cover my small expenses... I have no kids and very little to worry about. I've grown hundreds of Tomato plants and many in containers... but I always used a bagged Organic Soil or Soilless Mix that was amended. My Weakness is this years project will be the quantity of plants. I'm being forced to think differently about the entire Project due to expenses and Time. I'm not concerned If I lose my entire investment, but I know that I will succeed because I always find a way. Right now my top priority is the type of soil mix that I'm going to use. Once that is decided I'll be relieved. If I waited until I knew all the answers I'd never ever start.... so I'm Jumping in head first. I'm going to read up on soil mixes tonight, but I need to find a cost effective means of getting 25-30 Yards of soilless or soil mix. My limitations are this: 1. I will only use Natural Methods, I prefer 100% organic but I'm not concerned with it being OMRI listed or anything. 2. I need the Soil Mix that I use to have enough nutrients in it to sustain the whole season. I will be brewing compost tea in large batches and then adding to water for a foliar spray and occasional hand watering. I will probably add the tea to 100 plants per day to make sure that every plant gets some fresh tea every 10 days or so. I also have some Earth Juice Powdered Bloom Nutrients that are cheap and very concentrated.... I will worry more about nutrients when I understand the capabilities of my soil mix and how strong I can make it while keeping it light and aerated. So for now, if any of you have a Magic Soil Recipe that I can get my local soil company to mix up for me, I'd be very grateful. I know the owner and he's going to clean out his cement mixing pit for me and have me watch as he mixes it all to my liking... problem is, he doesn't understand exactly what I want to do and I don't want to rely entirely on his judgment because he's not the one growing the tomatoes.. I am. THANKS! |
February 23, 2012 | #19 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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Quote:
I'm also going to get my soil tested and see what she looks like. |
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February 23, 2012 | #20 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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Quote:
Come on man, give me some credit. 1000 plants are PLENTY, and I'll have lot's of work. I'm prepared to hire help and do what I need to get the job done. I will also be starting 250 plants early and the other later to stagger some of the work and lower the cost of starting all of them before the last frost indoors. Watering, and harvesting are going to be planned out like a military strategy. I can't wait to start! |
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February 23, 2012 | #21 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: NW Indiana
Posts: 1,150
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Quote:
If I were you, I'd contact some of the local nurseries and/or garden centers and see what they are using for potting mix. They might be willing to sell you some by the yard. If you still want to roll your own, here's some guidance. I'm guessing you are in Montrose, Colorado right? Here's a link to a local material supplier: http://www.coopersoils.com/Decorativ...ch___Bark.html Scroll down and look at "soil conditioner" - it's a decomposed pine bark. That would make a good base for a mix. If you used that for 60% of your mix plus 15% peat, 15% perlite and 10% compost or composted manure you'd have a good start. |
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February 23, 2012 | #22 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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Haha, that is the soil company I'm working with.
LJ is one of the owners and I know him from around town. Thanks for the Mix breakdown suggestion. He was suggesting 60% conditioner and 40% top soil... though as you and many others say... soil has no place in the Grow Bags. Nutrient feeding would prove to be much to time consuming if needed daily.... weekly, maybe. I'm thinking about some earlier suggestions with making "Frame-less" Raised Bed's I have access to a large size tiller and I could make that work... So, Back to the drawing boards. Right now I have some tomatoes that are ripening right now in my south facing window, they are in 100% coco coir and coco chunks in 7 gallon smart pots and doing awesome, but I feed them often... and I don't have the time or money to feed 1000 plants like I've been feeding these.... This was just a winter experiment to see what the taste is like, so far the tomatoes look very good. Last edited by MileHighGuy; February 23, 2012 at 11:42 PM. |
February 24, 2012 | #23 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Albuquerque, NM - Zone 7a
Posts: 209
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Frameless raised beds are exactly what we've been using in the meetinghouse garden, and I can tell you how they work when the weather gets hot and dry: poorly. Very poorly.
That's why I'm planning to do what I can to persuade the gardening committee to try something a bit more traditional this year. If they're still hot for the idea of using drip irrigation, yeah, that can work, but it's going to take more diligence than we've had going for us the previous two years. At least in your case, I don't think a failure of diligence is going to be a problem. |
February 25, 2012 | #24 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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Quote:
This is a game changer. That means I can water without any expense. This also means that I can plan a better system for watering!!! Anyways, I really appreciate your comment and real world experience with the frameless beds. After I get my soil tested, I'll have some further decisions to make. I might get lucky. The soil has a fairly nice consistency, but fear it's far to alkaline and a little to clay.... anyways, It might not be as bad as I think. I appreciate the continued input. Over the next week I'll be gathering some much needed information and updating my plans. I'll update here soon!!! |
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February 26, 2012 | #25 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Albuquerque, NM - Zone 7a
Posts: 209
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One possibility I'm thinking of discussing with the meetinghouse gardening committee is continuing with raised beds, but framing them with adobe bricks. I probably should check on pricing before I propose this, though. I think adobe would be less expensive than any kind of lumber, but I'm not sure on that.
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February 26, 2012 | #26 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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Others have also recommended hail bails for the raised bed gardens.... I'm still romancing the idea of tilling in 25-50 Yards of top soil and conditioner into my existing ground. I'll decide soon, time is ticking.
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February 26, 2012 | #27 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Montrose
Posts: 52
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Now that I'm thinking about it. I'd like to Line the perimeter of the entire growing area with hail bails to help block the wind while the plants are small and keep any Mulch that I use down on the ground.
This will also serve as barrier to reinforce the First perimeter Deer Fence.... I've got to determine how much the hay bails cost, I'm sure there are some "bad" bails that I could use. My soil feels clay, but green grass is growing in it and the deer scat is everywhere. I was reading a book called "One straw revolution" and it really got me thinking about Mulching and I'm considering using straw to cover the entire growing area and transplant the plants into the soil beneath, clearing a whole in the straw for each. I'm hoping this will help keep the soil wet and warmer at night when the hot Colorado sun is in peak summer with the dry breeze and cool nights. I also hope it will keep some weed down. |
February 27, 2012 | #28 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: West Plains, Mo.
Posts: 47
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I've used frameless raised beds for years, with no problems at all. If you rake up a 2" mound, around the edges, it keeps your water & nutrients in the bed also.
A watering system can be built very cheap, to do the watering quite easily, just drill the pipe at whatever intervals you are using for plant spacing. Good luck with your project! |
February 27, 2012 | #29 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Albuquerque, NM - Zone 7a
Posts: 209
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***giggles and snickers***
No_charge, what we have here is a failure to communicate. My fault, no doubt. Your rows with the 2" mound are not frameless. The 2" mound is the frame. What you have there is a long, narrow version of the same "raised-sunken bed" system I described earlier. The "sunken" part is a bit of a misnomer, because the cultivated/irrigated part of the soil is usually going to end up being at the same level as the pathways, what with all the tilling and amendments one may add. What makes "my" system (not original with me by any means) more workable with "rice paddy" whole bed irrigation when the plants are young, followed by shallow-trench irrigation, is, I always built the 2" dykes with big clods of heavy-clay subsoil that I brought up while hand-tilling the bed. Those are the "bricks" of the 2" dykes, and a thick slurry of the same subsoil makes the mortar. A 2" dyke of heavy clay does a pretty good job of containing irrigation water, without the expense of a drip irrigation system. But your drip irrigation system looks pretty good, and with irrigation like that, building the dykes with tilled topsoil is going to be all the containment you really need. ... Unless maybe the weather gets really hot and dry, which was definitely our case last year, when daytime temps for about two months were 98+F day after day. And in the meetinghouse garden, we didn't even have any of those 2" dykes. Any time the drip hoses were left running for any length of time, we had water forming big oblong splotches of damp soil on the sides of our genuinely frameless beds, and then evaporating straight up into the air. In 2010, minus last year's heat wave, nobody connected with the meetinghouse garden project (other than myself) seems to have noticed that very much, though I did hear of some complaints about the amount of water we were using. I'm hoping that in March, when we get started planning the 2012 garden, said people will have noticed. (...Much of the previous paragraph has no bearing on most of you who have followed my writing on this thread so far. Your gardens are your own little kingdom. Group activity and consensual decision-making introduces a whole host of potential communication problems that most of you will never be required to contend with.) Last edited by Petronius_II; February 27, 2012 at 01:50 PM. Reason: minor clarifications |
February 27, 2012 | #30 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: West Plains, Mo.
Posts: 47
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Well, perhaps you missed the beds, I don't know, They are raised about 2ft on the downhillside. I have a sloped garden space, so have to use beds. The beds are 18"wide also. The irrigation is not a drip system, its drilled pvc, the 2" ridge is to keep the water in the bed. The beds are made by raking the soil from the aisles, to build up beds, then water just the beds, not the whole garden, thereby conserving water.
Obviously we do have a communication problem here good luck with whatever your trying though |
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