I'm not necessarily concerned about production at this point. The stupid mice even ate potatoes to the ground, but they haven't touched the rosemary. I know mice will eat onions, and they ate my seedling apples. I have seeds for oregano and thyme, various types of mint. It may be a matter of...
Any suggestions for plants that will survive in a greenhouse that mice won't eat? My original greenhouse at this location is a smorgasbord for them. Rosemary has survived. Everything else has been eaten down to the ground.
Zone 6b
I put up sheets last night to temporarily block the largest gaps. This morning the temperature inside is 10 degrees higher than outside so I guess I have my culprit.
Possibly wih the constant wind the gaps take out all the warm air to the lowest ambient point, and once it's down the cold air stays?
In a sense. I put down many layers of an old tarp, and cardboard over the top. So the base is sealed, but not technically insulated. Bottom edges have been spray foamed.
There's one major gap on the house end that I need help to fix, and then I can spray foam the rest of the edges.
I have 2 thermometers, one inside and one outside. They are identical, purchased at the same time, and when I switch them I get the same result.
My old greenhouse at my former property had a distinct temperature difference after just a few panels were put on.
There are some very obvious...
I am completely confused at this point. Taking into consideration that the cattle panel greenhouse is not well sealed (to say the least) it seems to have gotten colder. The inside temperature at night is always 5 degrees below the outside. This morning it was 20 inside and 25 outside.
I'll be...
All the fruit trees have gone dormant. All 5 peaches survived the summer. All 5 2nd year apricots also survived. 2 almond seedlings and an apricot seedling survived in the dry garden; clay soil, no mulch, watered only once. We'll see if they survive the winter.
I have plums, Nanking cherries...
I did a temporary fix on the west end, but completed the east end and the doors. Even facing the house, the wind is still fierce enough to throw the doors open. I have temporary latches on until I can figure out a reasonable solution. In hindsight I should have hung the doors so they opened out...
My single squash is embarrassed. She's starting to blush. I may get seeds after all.
This weird period of higher temps after the first frost has tomatoes and watermelons regrowing from the root and blooming again.
A seedling almond survived the summer with 0 water May to August, and a second...
I'm trying to encourage everything to wild itself. If seeds will survive over the winter and come up on their own, I don't need to worry about seed shortages.
I planted dry beans this spring and they thrived, produced, and did their last gasp just before the heat hit. A full quarter of my dry garden space goes to that next spring, and a quarter to corn, while I test out new dry crops in the rest.
Main garden goes into full production next year.
ROFL. First, my system is a heart-attack inducing excuse for a freakout from both aquaponics and hydroponics purists. Both scream that 1) I'm doing it all wrong, 2) that it's neither hydroponics or aquaponics, and 3) that it will never work. So I call it hydroponics, blah, blah, blah...
My...