| |||||||
| Feeling Fruity Fruit trees, bushes and vines in the spotlight |
Visit our sponsors for all your gardening and growing needs! |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| ||||
| If you can, do Jenny but dont be overly anal about it. They are hardy plants that thrive in pots. Having different varieties will maximise your yield of fruit over time. Chandlers have really big fruit but all three are good.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs Last edited by pigletwillie; 11-02-2007 at 11:55 PM. |
| ||||
| I have bought some 2 year olds in the past that gave a bit of fruit but its from year 3 that they really get going. By year 5-6 they will be producing lots of fruit.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
| ||||
| I've got two for pots this year, so thanks for the tip about fruiting Piglet - I may have to wait! I want to keep them in pots so that I can pop them into teh greenhouse if we get a gale of wind. I assume that long term they will be ok in pots? Just the usual planning ahead and feeding? Anybody any tips? Thanks. |
| ||||
| They dont need frost, just in excess of 1000 hours at less than10oC.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
| ||||
| My Chandler planted in a pot early last season is looking a bit leggy but plenty of buds. Can I make it bushier (which my Earliblue - I think - is) just by pruning, and when should I do it ? I bought Earlieblue much later in the year and it's not even so much as lost it's leaves ! |
| ||||
| I've got three in an old wine crate and they didn't produce much of a crop last year [first year] so I'm hoping for a better crop this year. I'm a bit worried about the quality of the soil though, so any ideas on what to do to improve it - or what I should give them as feed - I don't have a ready supply of pine needles.
__________________ |
| ||||
| hi Eskymo - I see you are from sunny Fife too! I have 3 blueberries in pots and I have just been giving them general fertiliser for ericaceous plants. However, I read somewhere that tomato feed would be ok as well. ???
__________________ |
| ||||
| Tomato feed is not the best thing to feed them as it isnt correctly balanced for berries. Use something like Vitax ericaceous plant food, once in spring and once when starting to form berries.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
| |||
| Hi Eskymo, I can't see it doing any harm but as your blueberries need a maintained acid level in the soil then a feed that add's that along with other goodness is the best bet. Your comfrey feed could then be used on other plants that will appreicate it better ![]() |
![]() |
« Previous Thread
|
Next Thread »
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:30 PM.
















Linear Mode
