I met a guy today who told me about his 6 foot DEEP holes and I about lost my coffee via my nose. There is no good reason to go deep unless you tend your plants but once a month. While we tend the top 18 inches to perfection -as we should- everything deeper gets culled by root rot. A tap root doesn't exist via clone and even if it did it would matter not. I've been spending a fair amount of time blowing out and widening my camp to run 8 feet wide and 12-18 inches deep. This is mo betta imo.
I am also getting next to the straw this year, and using jute netting around the edges of the containers (this goes for those airpots etc too) not to conserve water, I have plenty, but to bring the roots up and out without getting culled from the heat. -T
Butte, lol thats great I was just trying to tackle my mixing problem. was even considering having a cement truck come by.
Wanted to drop some love on my BIG plant brothers...The work is picking up on my hill, some final tractor work to be done, then I can start getting soil mixed.
Going for more root space this season, as last year's 300's wern't large enough. The plant on the right was put in last week of june, when only about a foot tall. You guys have me thinking about stringing up lights out there for a May 1 planting, and I'll probably dabble, but...worth it?
Quick answer on mixing:
Back at it - Butte
Before you go and spend money out in Durham, you may want to consider the “wonder of worms” out by the dump instead. The Durham guy has long windrows of compost (digested cow manure specifically) outside that he says worms are in. He then sells this as worm castings. The nice folks out by the dump, by contrast, feed their worms a wide variety of materials and harvest the castings from the bottom of commercial worm beds. In my mind, this is the only way to get true castings. What the guy in Durham is doing is dishonest, imho...
...You guys have me thinking about stringing up lights out there for a May 1 planting, and I'll probably dabble, but...worth it?
that last garden could use better spacing. not that it isn't a sick garden. just looks like a couple more feet around the perimeter of each plant would do a lot for yield from the sides of the plant.
edit: looked at that pic again... i think the bad spacing is just an optical illusion.