Message from @Thomas Morrow
Discord ID: 339174018588344320
Well, raspberries won't do well, they have to be further north, but blackberries do fine here in GA. There are a number of varieties. It doesn't get quite as hot here, but they still do fine. Really well. I don't have to actively water them or anything. It may be too hot or too dry where you are.
The main thing is to make sure what you're trying to grow, as you asked, will work in your climate zone.
And be sure to get a variety that does best in that zone.
If there are different ones.
For blackberries, there definitely are: https://www.almanac.com/plant/blackberries
Bonus- blackberries grow like weeds. Very invasive, they love water
Just like passion fruit
Definitely a thorny weed!
Oh wow that looks useful.
Alright I'll have to check it out, thanks.
@texan- tx Looks like you're in Zone 8 in East Texas, and all the blackberry stock I looked at grows in zones 5-9 so you're good.
I'm trying to find a particular variety that will do well there.
I know they grow wild here
For example, this: ".A NEW thornless blackberry USDA cultivar called ‘Sweetie Pie’ was released that is resistant to disease, heat tolerant but tastes delicious. This cultivar, tested as MSUS119, came from a cross between ‘Navaho’ and MSUS29. MSUS29 is a seedling from a cross of [Humble x Brazos] x Navaho. ‘Sweetie Pie’ was selected at Poplarville, Mississippi in 1996. It was subsequently propagated and tested at McNeill, Mississippi, as well as in trial plantings in Louisiana and Arkansas. ‘Sweetie Pie’ grows vigorously and produces numerous floricanes, which are thornless and have a trailing growth habit."
I'd say if it does well in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas, this will work in Texas : )
So see if you can find that. Bonus--thornless!
Thanks man I'll try and find some seeds online
The wild Blackberries grow to be as big as half dollars here
A picture from this year, they only got up to a little over the size of a quarter at best. Last year they were huge. Biggest I've ever seen
Our first year they were pretty bitter. These year they're much sweeter. We keep em netted now to keep the stink bugs off
Yeah those stink bugs are a nuisance
And for whatever reason they love hanging around blackberries
They suck the juice out of anything sweet up here including corn
Will fence lizards eat them?
There's not many predators for them. Wild turkeys cross bred with domestic turkeys for some reason can eat pounds of them, but their stink power makes them inedible to most predators.
@here does anyone know anything about growing mushrooms?
Yes.
Are you looking to grow indoors or out?
I've only grown mushrooms from a kit, once, indoors. I'll defer to Alexander on this one.
All I know is that you need darkness and a shit ton of moisture.
Ambient (not direct) light
@Alexander B. - SC I am open to whatever works best
@R O M A N V S I know a fish tank would be a good place to let the spores grow.
Fish tank with a piece of glass inside to spray water on(enough to keep a humid environment, not make mushrooms wet) ambient light (such as in the vicinity of a window, not in the direct sunlight) everything must be thoroughly sterilized beforehand
Thomas has hit the nail on the head as far as indoor growing is concerned. Spores are injected into mason jars full of nutrient pellets in order to create the mycellium (spelling?) which is the "heart" of your mushroom growth. The contents are then removed from the jars and placed in a sanitized container, in ambient light, and then spritzed with water periodically.
When it comes to heartier mushrooms, you can easily grow them outside given the right conditions.