#1 Hello To all you fine people, Ok an to the "un"Fine people also
6/25 #1
Hungry, verging on hangry. Time to eat my afternoon snack.
![]()
#2
I forgot to comment on the worm! i always thought them to be caterpillars...
they RUINED my garden last year. within 3 days of noticing them 2/3 of my whole garden was eaten, withering, ruined. i pulled about 30 of them off, all sizes, from huge 4inch things, to tiny baby 1/2 inchers. i tried several plant safe organic pesticide poisons, NONE worked!! i finally found a highly recommended non-organic poison spray that was veggie safe and it worked, but it was too late. sad face. i still have the bottle and a itchy trigger finger. ain't nobody got time for dat.
#3
not entirely off topic, but i am co-producing an event for the last sunday in july that is a 100% benefit/charity event for our local diabetes clinic. Uncle, you will soo get a FB invite for it
been working on it for the last couple days, i just have to finalize the line up![]()
: Bishh on Vaughntv live.Content people are annoying.
Here's what I do: In the morning, I go outside with my coffee and look for the worms (both tobacco and tomato will munch on either plant). While looking for worms, I do some hand pollinating (we have plenty of bees - dog gets stung often enough - but it can't hurt); the worms will often be on the bottom side of leaves and branches. Obvious signs are munched leaves and fruits; look downward from the top, looking all around the lower leaves for a black, granular looking substance - that's worm poop. When you spot the worm poop, look upward to leaves above that area. They are very well camouflaged, but you will get used to what you are looking for. Once I find one, I just clip off the branch they are on. Don't bother with all the pesticides, etc. - too much of a hassle and kind of unnecessary. The numbers of these beasts you will find will be relatively few; it's not like an aphid infestation. After I clip off the branch (it's almost always out on a smaller tip, so you're not whacking half the plant or anything), I just take it away from the plants and put it up on some rocks, or on top of the wall... birds come by and do the rest. heh heh
06/25 Entry #5 . . .
Okay - Now I know that "YOU" know I live in Florida . . .![]()
AND - I also know that "YOU" know . . .
That I really "Like" Ya' and would come to any of "YOUR" Events . . .
![]()
That is if I could . . . So - Does that invite come with a plane ticket too . . .![]()
2: I agree levi, Monsanto is guilty of killing of the bees, recently one county found 250,000 dead. The bees are dying the same way "normal" insects do, GMO food has Roundup inside of it and eating on it kills the insects and bees.
4: Speaking of gardens. If you are going to do one or have one, look into aquaponics. It is a fish/plant system that helps each other. You feed the fish and they go to the restroom, the water with the waste is pumped to the plants. Through a biological process the waste is changed to an edible form for the plants who finish eating the waste. The fresh water is then returned to the fish by a siphon process and the cycle begins again. Plants can grown 3-4 times faster than a conventional garden and it uses 1/10th of the water. Depending on your set up, you have fish to eat, as they reproduce and grow, and your veggies to boot. Tons of info can be found on Youtube and you can fairly easily build one. I am gathering my parts for mine now to start growing this next spring.
6/25 #1
Hi all happy day for me today it is pay day! Yahoo.