Le Potager du Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
sicetaitsimple
Econologue expert
Econologue expert
posts: 9774
Registration: 31/10/16, 18:51
Location: Lower Normandy
x 2638

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by sicetaitsimple » 17/11/17, 19:10

Den54 wrote:

Good evening, good WE.A +


And especially good luck to you if you attack this WE!
1 x
Den54
I understand econologic
I understand econologic
posts: 86
Registration: 11/11/17, 11:18
Location: Meurthe and Moselle
x 17

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Den54 » 17/11/17, 21:03

sicetaitsimple wrote:
Den54 wrote:

Good evening, good WE.A +


And especially good luck to you if you attack this WE!


Thank you sicetaitsimple;)

I'm on page 163, arrival of julienmos, and his questions Very nice this boy ^^ (in fact it's all me :)

(I read in the meantime the vegetable garden of the lazy Breton too, still too short for the moment unfortunately! =
I look forward to the Corsican sloth's garden. : roll: Pan pan, I'm dead, I'm going out : Oops: )

Small question to the specialists: and yes, in my presentation, I spoke of my south, but I also have, to the north of my house / south-facing land, a courtyard and a small stone staircase (I will have to show you a day the imprint of hundreds / thousands of shoes / clogs left on these steps !!!) which leads to a small lot of about 1 y.
Bordered to the east (so to the right when looking through a very high wall of a terraced house, hydrangeas hydrangeas at the base, to the west, ditto and my acubas, which have just been pruned over a good meter (future brf ), to the north, small wall and road.

What could I plant there (under hay), given that even in summer, the sun's rays, although present, are still very "sporadic"?
re thank you re good WE and re bybye
0 x
sicetaitsimple
Econologue expert
Econologue expert
posts: 9774
Registration: 31/10/16, 18:51
Location: Lower Normandy
x 2638

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by sicetaitsimple » 17/11/17, 22:07

Den54 wrote:What could I plant there (under hay), given that even in summer, the sun's rays, although present, are still very "sporadic"?


Good question. Personally I have in a passage 3 m wide along the house, along the fence, very little sunshine, raspberries which are doing and producing very well, much better than those which are much better exposed not in the vegetable garden, but with the same exposure as in this one.

They suck thoroughly, this winter I will pull some and transplant in my new play area, which will be much sunnier. We'll see.
0 x
Den54
I understand econologic
I understand econologic
posts: 86
Registration: 11/11/17, 11:18
Location: Meurthe and Moselle
x 17

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Den54 » 18/11/17, 07:49

sicetaitsimple wrote:
Den54 wrote:What could I plant there (under hay), given that even in summer, the sun's rays, although present, are still very "sporadic"?


Good question. Personally I have in a passage 3 m wide along the house, along the fence, very little sunshine, raspberries which are doing and producing very well, much better than those which are much better exposed not in the vegetable garden, but with the same exposure as in this one.

They suck thoroughly, this winter I will pull some and transplant in my new play area, which will be much sunnier. We'll see.


thank you It was simple, a very good idea ^^ especially since my wife loves it and has fun Audrey Toutou

http://lespopcorn.com/wp-content/upload ... boises.jpg : Wink:

She already has a little corner of her own, with raspberries, gooseberries (yum and ouch it stings) and blackcurrant, but it's a real job. :!:

I have also since browsed the net, we speak in particular of shrubs such as aucuba and hydrangea, and as luck would have it, I have some.
For vegetables, a priori, leaf and root plants.
There may be feedback from the community here.
Aaaaaaa +
0 x
paysan.bio
Éconologue good!
Éconologue good!
posts: 333
Registration: 07/03/17, 08:50
x 197

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by paysan.bio » 18/11/17, 08:14

Den54 wrote:
sicetaitsimple wrote:
Den54 wrote:

Good evening, good WE.A +


And especially good luck to you if you attack this WE!


Thank you sicetaitsimple;)

I'm on page 163, arrival of julienmos, and his questions Very nice this boy ^^ (in fact it's all me :)

(I read in the meantime the vegetable garden of the lazy Breton too, still too short for the moment unfortunately! =
I look forward to the Corsican sloth's garden. : roll: Pan pan, I'm dead, I'm going out : Oops: )

Small question to the specialists: and yes, in my presentation, I spoke of my south, but I also have, to the north of my house / south-facing land, a courtyard and a small stone staircase (I will have to show you a day the imprint of hundreds / thousands of shoes / clogs left on these steps !!!) which leads to a small lot of about 1 y.
Bordered to the east (so to the right when looking through a very high wall of a terraced house, hydrangeas hydrangeas at the base, to the west, ditto and my acubas, which have just been pruned over a good meter (future brf ), to the north, small wall and road.

What could I plant there (under hay), given that even in summer, the sun's rays, although present, are still very "sporadic"?
re thank you re good WE and re bybye


raspberries.
in addition the inertia of the wall should please them very much.
0 x
paysan.bio
Éconologue good!
Éconologue good!
posts: 333
Registration: 07/03/17, 08:50
x 197

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by paysan.bio » 18/11/17, 08:24

along the wall, you can also make Fortex beans.
they need heat but not necessarily direct sun.
they are "giant" climbers so you have to train.
bamboos against the wall can do the trick.
3 x
User avatar
Lolounette
Éconologue good!
Éconologue good!
posts: 257
Registration: 29/06/17, 12:17
Location: Puy-de-Dome, 350m of alt.
x 77

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Lolounette » 18/11/17, 10:28

Next year I really want to try these beans that you only say good about!
in addition I intend to try to make a vegetal screen so as not to see the neighbor who gives me the mouth when she weeds her vegetable garden : Mrgreen:


on the other hand the seeds cost a fortune : Shock:
you said it seems to me that you harvested yours yourself, so it's a fixed variety and not a hybrid?
if this is the case that reassures me because at 10 € the package, gossips!




signed: la radine auvergnate : Mrgreen:
1 x
User avatar
Did67
Moderator
Moderator
posts: 20362
Registration: 20/01/08, 16:34
Location: Alsace
x 8685

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Did67 » 18/11/17, 10:46

When you have any doubts about the nature of a variety, only one reliable source: the official GNIS catalog.

The type of variety is indicated there: "classic variety" = stable variety, not hybrid [see section "additional information"]

http://www.gnis.fr/variete/fortex-6995
3 x
User avatar
Lolounette
Éconologue good!
Éconologue good!
posts: 257
Registration: 29/06/17, 12:17
Location: Puy-de-Dome, 350m of alt.
x 77

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Lolounette » 18/11/17, 11:36

ha awesome, thank you Didier! :)
0 x
Den54
I understand econologic
I understand econologic
posts: 86
Registration: 11/11/17, 11:18
Location: Meurthe and Moselle
x 17

Re: The Kitchen Garden Sloth: Gardening without fatigue more than Bio




by Den54 » 18/11/17, 12:12

Paysan.bio wrote:along the wall, you can also make Fortex beans.
they need heat but not necessarily direct sun.
they are "giant" climbers so you have to train.
bamboos against the wall can do the trick.


ah !! interesting, thank you paysan.bio :) but oh misery, my wife had made a beautiful bamboo palisade of about 3-4 mx3-4 m, moreover colored with the spray, for a wall and for flowers (ipomées, nasturtiums, cobées), but during work at a neighbor's house, she let the workers throw her away because she was annoying, grrr.
Otherwise, my two balls arrived, "beefy mice" laid flat, the layers seem easy to unwind, that reassures me; and at least I'll take my recommended 12000 daily steps ^^
And!!!! I recovered the coating net without damaging it: 4 turns / bale, that must be 10 m / bale! I said to myself, like great for peas ^^ but maybe also for giant beans?

For the price: he could not bring me "used" bullets, because too many losses on the way over 8 km according to him; therefore hay from untreated natural meadows, at a price of € 50 per 500 kg. I do not find that excessive; in view of their labor and what they reap from it, but that's my feeling.
FYI, the same ball, butsown meadow, this year poor in hay: 150 to 180 €. Tough for horse riding lovers and owners of canassons.
He even offered me next year, if I continued, to make me balls of 1m (standard flat height of 1.20 or 1.40 - know more -, but diameter of 1 m) (the adjustment being made very quickly d 'after him)
There you have it, the good life for me these next few days, leaves everywhere, sprinkling of brf, a little more for the raspberries of "bobonne" ♥, and spreading of hay (♪♪ I will put a giant bafle with Charles Trénet ^^ ♫♫)
And I continue my reading of course.
(I have to take photos)
chuss :!:
0 x

 


  • Similar topics
    Replies
    views
    Last message

Back to "Agriculture: problems and pollution, new techniques and solutions"

Who is online ?

Users browsing this forum : No registered users and 258 guests