Message from @John O -

Discord ID: 356058814971248662


2017-08-18 01:31:43 UTC  

I don't eat a whole lot of sugar. I mean compared the Golden Delicious down the hill, they dont taste like much.

2017-08-18 01:32:10 UTC  

Maybe it was just that one I ate.

2017-08-18 01:45:14 UTC  

Yeah those are better for cider

2017-08-18 01:45:56 UTC  

Good, were big cider drinkers.

2017-08-18 01:46:04 UTC  

Thanks!

2017-08-18 01:50:00 UTC  

Just poking fun

2017-08-18 02:32:46 UTC  

I know, no worries 👍

2017-08-31 00:53:43 UTC  

I've found a few of these around the property. Not sure what they are. They were under oak trees. Any ideas?

2017-08-31 00:53:57 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/322712549449793536/352616968492154890/image.jpg

2017-09-09 12:29:30 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/322712549449793536/356053504256901120/JPEG_20170909_082920.jpg

2017-09-09 12:29:49 UTC  

This hurricane is gonna totally ruin my aquaponics

2017-09-09 12:36:22 UTC  

@John M -#7072 looks like spring mix lettuce

2017-09-09 12:37:35 UTC  

I can't remember exactly what it was. I wasn't expecting it to do well in 90° Florida weather. The other stuff is radishes, beets, and onions.

2017-09-09 12:38:24 UTC  

There's a strain of Arizona and Jericho lettuce that does well in high heat. Yours looks great.

2017-09-09 12:40:20 UTC  

Thanks man, I've gotten pretty lucky. It's been overcast about 3 days out of the week every week for about 2 months.

2017-09-09 12:40:44 UTC  

Aquaponics is stupid easy. I highly recommend it. Just feed the fish every 2-3 days

2017-09-09 12:41:51 UTC  

Fish? There are fish involved?

2017-09-09 12:44:43 UTC  

Aquaponics is aquaculture+hydroponics.

2017-09-09 12:44:54 UTC  

Fish poop fertilizes the plants.

2017-09-09 12:49:17 UTC  

Ah cool I had no idea

2017-09-09 12:50:36 UTC  

Look into it. Mine is big and semi-permanent, but you can make a little one with a 2 gallon fish bowl.

2017-09-09 13:32:24 UTC  

Will do. Sounds intriguing.

2017-09-09 16:59:21 UTC  

You should switch to no till organic anyway

2017-09-09 17:31:12 UTC  

When I buy some property, I want to do hugelkultur

2017-09-09 17:32:04 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/322712549449793536/356129646225653760/HugelkulturRaisedBed.jpg

2017-09-09 17:33:15 UTC  

You don't need a tree. You can just get a huge pile of green wood chips. A place by my house has a 20 ft pile for free. They're low quality for landscaping, but perfect for composting.

2017-09-09 20:22:31 UTC  

Nice!! Anyone here read "teaming with microbes"

2017-09-09 20:24:25 UTC  

If not then I highly recommend it

2017-09-10 15:03:26 UTC  
2017-09-10 15:04:04 UTC  

This guy does good introductory level hydroponics videos, if anyone's interested

2017-09-10 16:37:34 UTC  

Go no till

2017-09-10 16:47:36 UTC  

What exactly do you mean by this?

2017-09-10 17:02:59 UTC  

You don't till the soil. Instead you focus on keeping the soil life healthy(from insects, to bacteria, to fungi, nematodes, etc)

2017-09-10 17:05:04 UTC  

Basically healthy soil life will make anything and everything your plants need, so instead of administering what you think your plants need, they instead have an entire nutrient buffet in the soil that they can draw from as they need it

2017-09-10 17:06:13 UTC  

It involves learning about the soil food web and understanding the different rolls of the microlife

2017-09-10 17:07:00 UTC  

Basically everything you do will be to support that life rather doing what you think your plants nees

2017-09-10 17:07:03 UTC  

Need

2017-09-10 17:07:27 UTC  

I do green fertilizer in my traditional garden. I've been thinking about all that, but I'm moving soon, so I'm not sure that it's worth it.

2017-09-10 17:08:11 UTC  

Start it up at your new place

2017-09-10 17:09:24 UTC  

And read "teaming with microbes" by Jeff Lowenfels and Wayne Lewis

2017-09-10 17:09:52 UTC  

The whole system can be used indoors as well