Podilia
House Bee
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2017
- Messages
- 178
- Reaction score
- 250
- Location
- UA, Vinnytsia region
- Hive Type
- Dadant
- Number of Hives
- 40-50
I see banana trees? Really?So far I saw few bigger than a car wheel..
I see banana trees? Really?So far I saw few bigger than a car wheel..
Roast squirrel stuffed with walnuts, yummy.We seem to have a small crop of walnuts. Last year there were only about a dozen and the squirrels got to them first. Perhaps this year we might actually get some for ourselves.
James
It's not problem to grow it, it's problem to get ripe bananas. These are with small fruits. Will see how fast these climate changes will go, maybe it will be also solved..I see banana trees? Really?
Last nights rain filled a 1,000 litre IBC tank for me last night.Anybody had any rain? We are gagging for it here. The ground is rock hard again
our ground is dry and cracked. We have had just enough to keep the grass green.Rain? It's rained practically every day, some of the time, for eight weeks
This has been our summer since mid July and it doesn't look like it's going to improve any time soon
I also try something unusual. I've started from a citrus tree. Initially that tree, the unknown wild variety from a seed, was in a 30 litres plastic barrel. The barell began to fall into pieces after several seasons when I moved it to the backyard in spring and back into the house in autumn. I think the conditions were harmful to that plastic. However the tree was growing well until it filled up the barrel with roots. I've learned citrus trees in pots always like free space. So the tree dropped leaves during the winter 22. In March it was relocated (with big efforts) to the backyard. Early spring night frost added new suffering to it. It was a bare stick with dry branches. I decided to do the experiment. In youtube I watched a video of a guy from southern England growing citrus trees outdoor. Sure his winter is milder than mine.It's not problem to grow it, it's problem to get ripe bananas. These are with small fruits. Will see how fast these climate changes will go, maybe it will be also solved..
Try picking one up, they rear that big fat head, really makes you jump, coincidentally I found one yesterdayLooks like an elephant hawk moth! I hope you put it somewhere safe.
Some hawk moths will enter beehives unchallenged, but I'd be happy to see them.
We found one in the garden couple of years ago.I was wandering over to the veggie plot this afternoon and saw this strolling across the drive:
I'm fairly sure it's an Elephant hawk-moth caterpillar. It was huge! I hope it's not going to climb any trees. I don't want them falling on the house.
James
Storm? Lucky B still nothing here all our maincrop spuds were dug two weeks ago. Hate leaving them to slugsThe weather feels like it's ideal for the spread of blight to outdoor plants at the moment, especially after the storm that's just passed through. The wind can carry it for miles. After last year I decided not to grow maincrop potatoes any more because they always seem to get it -- I just can't get them to the end of their growing season before the conditions turn ideal for it to spread, and it seems to spread like wildfire once it gets going. Fortunately Charlotte potatoes seem to make fantastic chips And actually it works out nicely that the first and second earlies are out of the ground in time to get winter brassicas into the same space after lifting the potatoes.
By comparison, inside the polytunnel and Frankenstein's Greenhouse the tomatoes seem to be doing fine, presumably because it's much harder for the wind-borne blight spores to get to them. I'd love to be able to grow some tomatoes outdoors, especially perhaps some cherry varieties in hanging baskets, but I just don't see it as worth the effort if the plants aren't likely to make it past August. I'm starting to pinch the tops out of the plants once they reach the polytunnel roof now. Most of them will be at least ten feet tall by the time they do and I don't really have space for them to get any taller. It seems to be taking ages for the fruit to ripen though. I'm guessing that's a weather thing.
James
Enter your email address to join: