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heirloomgal
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I'm actually feeling tempted to do some pea starts since they could handle this once sprouted.
Yes.Is this the plant that also goes by the name 'Cast Iron Plant' and is often grow as a houseplant?
Two problems with that. One I don't HAVE a real indoor setup with lights (I HAD one once, but the lights have long since broken, and, by now, the room where it is has been so filled up by my parents with stuff in storage that getting it back to plant might be a battle beyond my strength. Plus, they've taken away my space for my fermentation jugs, so that space might have to be used for that.) And even if I could get it working again, a table in a basement room is not a great place to try to grow indeterminate vines.Plant your peas in the Fall!
Use you indoor seed starting setup and plan to transplant. MINE is in my basement and will be cave temperature in July.![]()
Growing Peas in the Fall - Our Stoney Acres
Depending on where you live, growing peas in the fall can be a little tricky. This guide will help you come up with the perfect planting date for your area.ourstoneyacres.com
I am still gonna throw a few in the ground this week, just to see.
Of course, it could turn out to be a male tree.STILL not sure what to do about my mulberry dilemma. In THEORY, the tree is big enough now that it should start producing even in the pot it's in, but it hasn't yet. I don't know whether to put it in the ground or not. if it IS an eating mulberry, I'd hate to waste it, but if (far more likely) it's one of the wild ones that grow all around here, planting it is the LAST thing I want to do! Why did I have to dump those dried mulberries back THERE of all places!
Wait a sec, mulberries are dioecious? Then I'm screwed either way. If the tree is male, then I'll get no fruit at all, and if it is female, then it's only pollinators will be the wild ones in the neighborhood. It might not effect the fruit of THAT one (since the edible parts is all maternal anyway) but it means that any further seed born descendants will basically be crap (and I have mentioned how much trouble I have with any sort of vegetative propagation.)Of course, it could turn out to be a male tree.I have a row of mulberries on one of my property lines (originally 5 or 6) and only one of them bore fruit. The others are male.
And because mature mulberry trees apparently like to split & lean over into my neighbor's property, I'm probably bringing in a boom & taking all of them down. Sure wish those trees weren't so uncooperative, I hate cutting down living trees... especially when I'd like to focus on taking down the 30-40 dead ASH TREES instead.![]()