David Hammond wrote:Coming home this afternoon, my daughter witnessed two squirrels fussing over this one; she said, when she spotted them, one of them dropped to the fence, flat, as though trying to hide, knowing it was doing something very wrong.
nr706 wrote:I don't know where I read the tip, but this year I planted marigolds all around the tomatoes. No more squirrel attacks (although my next door neighbor has seen unusually frequent attacks this year).
Mhays wrote:Hausenfeffer with a side of burgoo.
AngrySarah wrote:As for the squirrel problem:
I am told that squirrels are highly territorial. So if the resident squirrels are gone it can take a few seasons before some new ones move in.
Buy or borrow a .22 with a scope. Use some relatively low power ammo. Fire up at the squirrels. A .22 bullet falling back to earth at terminal velocity can't hurt humans.
This is obviously illegal, maybe even a felony. However it gets the job done.
Cathy2 wrote:David,
If you soil is very wet, then please steer clear of your garden. You will compact the soil, which affects aeration and a pain to reverse later on.
Regards,
messycook wrote:I'm going to follow "Square Foot Gardening" - anyone else used this method? Basically you grow each crop in a 1x1 foot and replant after each harvest, and then you don't get 100 beets all at once. Larger plants, like tomatoes, get placed along a fence and obviously don't get replanted.
David Hammond wrote:I'm daydreaming about My Garden, 2008, and I'm determined this year to use a better grade of tomato cage. Those lightweight aluminum frames are just not strong enough for tomatoes. Last year, cages were completely dominated by the hearty plants: torn up, twisted, knocked over.
messycook wrote:
I'm going to follow "Square Foot Gardening" - anyone else used this method? Basically you grow each crop in a 1x1 foot and replant after each harvest, and then you don't get 100 beets all at once. Larger plants, like tomatoes, get placed along a fence and obviously don't get replanted.
messycook wrote:messycook wrote:
I'm going to follow "Square Foot Gardening" - anyone else used this method? Basically you grow each crop in a 1x1 foot and replant after each harvest, and then you don't get 100 beets all at once. Larger plants, like tomatoes, get placed along a fence and obviously don't get replanted.
well, I'm an idiot and forgot about the beginning of this original post and basically asked the question that already was addressed a long time ago. Sorry about that! However, I have started my first two square feet: arugula, bibb lettuce, and mesclun mix....the tiny leaves are starting to poke through! Hopefully I'll have pictures posted in a few weeks, and will put bean seeds in next week.
razbry wrote:So Dave...where is the garden for 2008?