Le Potager du Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
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Did67
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 19/06/18, 19:03

Birds and Gardens Fair / 28 October / at Der Nature

I confirmed my presence for a conference on 28 October at Der Nature (near Saint-Dizier).
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 19/06/18, 19:06

Conference in Couternon (Côte d'Or) / 7 October 2018

I also confirmed my presence at a small "local" operation in Couternon, near Dijon, on Sunday October 7th.
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Moindreffor » 19/06/18, 21:27

Did67 wrote:Salon Marjolaine / Paris"I am making contact with you because I would like to invite Mr. Didier Helmstetter for a conference at the next Marjolaine fair (74 visitors)
if with that your number of subscribers does not make a big good

"the beginning of glory" soon it will be necessary to say Monsieur Didier : Mrgreen:
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Adrien (ex-nico239) » 20/06/18, 01:56

Go hop questions on the last video

You know your garden by heart but not us .... : Mrgreen:
An overview (at the beginning of the video) would allow us to better situate: right, left, up, down ...
Or an overall picture on the forum

As I want to add this plant that is absent for the moment from our gardens ....
Originally your borage you have sown or planted?
And how many years?

Identical question for Eryngiums that I want to implant
Sown or planted?

Artichoke seedling: when do you do it?

For asparagus I corroborate
Not that I have grown but picked wild asparagus harvested in the woods ... and of course they are all green and all ... excellent

I will (still) have some questions about raspberries but I will ask them apart ...

I confirm the turnips in direct sowing it grows ... finally this year I have many unlike last year.

Precision ... winter garlic? sowed when and ditto for spring garlic? (I know I forget all the time grrrr)

And voilou and thank you for this tour of the kitchen garden. Image
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 20/06/18, 09:10

nico239 wrote:Go hop questions on the last video

You know your garden by heart but not us .... : Mrgreen:
An overview (at the beginning of the video) would allow us to better situate: right, left, up, down ...
Or an overall picture on the forum

As I want to add this plant that is absent for the moment from our gardens ....
Originally your borage you have sown or planted?
And how many years?

Identical question for Eryngiums that I want to implant
Sown or planted?

Artichoke seedling: when do you do it?

For asparagus I corroborate
Not that I have grown but picked wild asparagus harvested in the woods ... and of course they are all green and all ... excellent

I will (still) have some questions about raspberries but I will ask them apart ...

I confirm the turnips in direct sowing it grows ... finally this year I have many unlike last year.

Precision ... winter garlic? sowed when and ditto for spring garlic? (I know I forget all the time grrrr)

And voilou and thank you for this tour of the kitchen garden. Image


1) I dream of flying over in a drone ... Maybe Santa will give me such a fantasy ???

But I'll do a general view from the balcony of my house next time. Promised.

2) These were sown in buckets and replanted in this hay accordion; maybe mid-April ???

But the borage is very good itself. I have some sporadic feet, right and left ...

3) The Eryngium was purchased from a garden center. A bucket. It reseeds very well. We can even "burst" stumps ...

4) Artichoke seedlings: like the rest. In seedlings running March (from memory). Frame. Then replanted out ...

5) The winter garlic was planted, in ground covered with Véronique (plantation under "living cover") at the very beginning of November (a little late) ... I unrolled the hay a little late, in January. It was very compact, a bit like felt. Did this play ????

Spring garlic, like other bulbs, was planted directly through the hay very early, early March ...
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 20/06/18, 09:17

Moindreffor wrote:
"the beginning of glory" soon it will be necessary to say Monsieur Didier : Mrgreen:


Pity. Never tell me sir ... Even at my funeral!

[The address and other forms of politeness, in my mind, is that we take distance. Except very rare circumstances where a diplomatic language was essential - Ministers, etc ... - I have always been on familiar terms. One of my successive directors, one fine day, after 6 months, my diagnosis was made, he was an "idiot", and overnight, I saw him; the secretary was stuck: "But you saw him!" - "Yes, I know, he's an asshole!"]

[For my funeral, I believe I have already told it, I asked my wife to note in a notebook the "daily reproaches", "the subjects of nervousness" ... for my burial; instead of "glorifying" me that day, which makes the departure necessarily a little sad, a little painful given the feeling of losing someone "exceptional" as everyone adds, she can then reread this notebook and to be somewhat relieved! "Finally got rid of this pain in the ass, this mess, this procrastinator!]
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by guibnd » 20/06/18, 10:19

Did67 wrote:[For my funeral, I believe I have already told it, I asked my wife to note in a notebook the "daily reproaches", "the subjects of nervousness" ... for my burial; instead of "glorifying" me that day, which makes the departure necessarily a little sad, a little painful given the feeling of losing someone "exceptional" as everyone adds, she can then reread this notebook and to be somewhat relieved! "Finally got rid of this pain in the ass, this fucker, this procrastinator!

Of course, you will say that you were a lazy man ... but that you will have looked for him! : Mrgreen:

do some of you have onions that go up to seed? mine (my red onions) transplanted in the spring are rising and suddenly no pretty bulbs on the foot and a stem in hollow tube. not terrible !
already last year, I had some like that but this year is the 3 / 4!
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Twandering with clayey and fertile wheat, full of water in winter, cold in spring, crushed and cracked in summer,
but that was before the Didite ...
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Moindreffor » 20/06/18, 11:09

Guibnd wrote:
Did67 wrote:[For my funeral, I believe I have already told it, I asked my wife to note in a notebook the "daily reproaches", "the subjects of nervousness" ... for my burial; instead of "glorifying" me that day, which makes the departure necessarily a little sad, a little painful given the feeling of losing someone "exceptional" as everyone adds, she can then reread this notebook and to be somewhat relieved! "Finally got rid of this pain in the ass, this fucker, this procrastinator!

Of course, you will say that you were a lazy man ... but that you will have looked for him! : Mrgreen:

do some of you have onions that go up to seed? mine (my red onions) transplanted in the spring are rising and suddenly no pretty bulbs on the foot and a stem in hollow tube. not terrible !
already last year, I had some like that but this year is the 3 / 4!

I think you have to question the bulbs you planted. Origin? quality? variety?
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Moindreffor » 20/06/18, 11:11

Did67 wrote:1) I dream of flying over in a drone ... Maybe Santa will give me such a fantasy ???

open a subject of the genre that can film my garden with a drone in the agriculture part, you will find I think easily someone who will do that to you
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Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 20/06/18, 12:40

Guibnd wrote:
do some of you have onions that go up to seed? mine (my red onions) transplanted in the spring are rising and suddenly no pretty bulbs on the foot and a stem in hollow tube. not terrible !
already last year, I had some like that but this year is the 3 / 4!


It's been two years since my "reds" gave me the shot ... One year, it was I believe "Brunswick Reds", and the other "Carmen" ... It seems to be a choice of red ...

- perhaps they can not manage the excess of fertility and decree, once the nitrification of the hay committed, that they will manage to do their cycle in one year instead of two - it makes a year of gained? ???

- Gerbeaud says this: "a premature drop in temperatures over a number of days, especially in biennials which need a long period of cold to trigger the reproductive phase. This particularly concerns carrot, celery and onion." Maybe this is still an exception and should it be planted much later ??? Test to be planned next year.

https://www.gerbeaud.com/jardin/fiches/ ... raines.php

Note, the traditional countries of red onions tend to be "mild winter": Roscoff, Lanzarote, Florence ... In Africa, "Galmi violet" is cultivated. Onions from Dogon country are purple ...

In the meantime, there is only one solution: harvest as soon as the flower head forms, to "save what can be saved" (the bulb already formed; otherwise, its contents will be transferred to the stems and seeds!)
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