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@Lomey @Erikcooper - Any suggestions or advice on blueberries? I'd like to try blueberries but I hear they're difficult; what works for you guys?
I would too. Store bought veggies just don't taste the same as home grown.Sorry to hear that. Are you gonna replant? I would.
They like acidic soil so make sure you amend it with good compost, they hate clay. Use a good fertilizer that is made for azaleas or holly. Holly-Tone is a great organic acidic food. Mulch them with pine straw or peat moss, it raises the acidic level. They don't like to sit in water or be to moist at the roots. You have to have at least 2 different varieties for them to produce. 3 varieties is even better. There are dwarf varieties that only get about 3 ft tall. The regular varieties can get 6 ft or so in Kansas City area. You probably want to make sure you get like sizes. After well established for a few years you can trim back the old wood by 1/3 each year to control them.@Lomey @Erikcooper - Any suggestions or advice on blueberries? I'd like to try blueberries but I hear they're difficult; what works for you guys?
This is my first year with the space to do anything so I'm new with them as well. I'm planning to do a couple more@Lomey @Erikcooper - Any suggestions or advice on blueberries? I'd like to try blueberries but I hear they're difficult; what works for you guys?
Way to go Hoshy!I'll have to take some pictures. We started our first small garden this year. We are pretty excited.
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Good to hear you got something back in the ground brother!I replanted today after the Mother's Day massacre. Toms, jalapeños, zucs, cukes back In Mother Earth. (Actually back into about 4 years of composted loam.)
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Sounds great. Would love to see some pictures.spring has been busy at our house. We've been concentrating on adding thoughtfully to our property. So far we have added raspberries, apples and a garden yesterday. WE are trying to do our landscapeing with eatables as well. Garden will have cukes, summer squash, spaghetti squash, egg plant, carrots, radishes, peas, beans, tomatoes, peppers, onions, garlic and an assortment of herbs. spring has been really exciting watching everything int the woods come alive. We've had a lot of visitors as well. Deer, bear, turkeys, cranes and an assortment of ducks........and one (dead) woodchuck.
If it's still in the planter. Get it into a good well covered (light wind/partial shade area) of your yard. It is probably root bound and is choking itself out in the planter. Tree roots are typically 2xs the length of the top canopy width. You may even need to do some root pruning when transplanting. It's actually good for a tree with bound roots to be pruned at the roots, so that it doesn't stay girdled. I'd transplant it during early fall.I have a 4 year old Japanese Maple I transplanted a few weeks ago. These things grow ridiculously slow. My grandmother has one that's about 20 years old and this small one came up beneath it. She moved it to a planter that was still underneath the other and 4 years later it's about 15 inches tall at the most. I'm hoping I can keep it growing cause they're great looking trees
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