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  • #16
    Spent Hops can be used either way FF. If we get a hot summer, a good soaking followed by a mulch might be just the thing!
    ntg
    Never be afraid to try something new.
    Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark.
    A large group of professionals built the Titanic
    ==================================================

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    • #17
      Originally posted by fruitfanatic
      Loads of great info gents thanks again. Just a couple more queries (feel free to ignore me if i begin to sound like an overly curious kid).
      Andrew do you use the hops as a mulch or rot them down like leafmold?
      Nick any thoughts on hotbeds would like to try to grow melons
      I use my hops after beer making or dried out, I just add them to the beds in Autumn and allow the worms to pull it down. After using for beer they have broken down already and are mushy. You can add them to your compost bin.
      Best wishes
      Andrewo
      Harbinger of Rhubarb tales

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      • #18
        To make a hotbed, which should be started as soon as possible, fill either a pit with a drainage layer of rubble or a raised bed structure with fresh manure from horses bedded on wheat straw (wood-chips don’t work). Tread this down to 1ft deep and as it rots it will heat up. Check with a thermometer and when the temperature drops to 50C, pile on a 10cm layer of moist top soil. Cover this with cloches or a cold frame and wait until the temperature drops to 25C before sowing early salads, broad beans and herbs.

        If you can’t get manure, put a bale of straw with the ends pointing up onto a polythene sheet in the greenhouse. Soak the bale with high nitrogen liquid feed such as lawn fertiliser. Doing this will trigger the rotting process, releasing both heat and carbon dioxide (the gas needed for photosynthesis) for the benefit of other plants in the greenhouse. Cover with soil and when it is as warm and cosy as an electric blanket, sow your seeds.
        Best wishes
        Andrewo
        Harbinger of Rhubarb tales

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        • #19
          You can gro tomatoes i straw bales as well Andrew & the heat gets them going earlier.
          ntg
          Never be afraid to try something new.
          Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark.
          A large group of professionals built the Titanic
          ==================================================

          Comment


          • #20
            How do you support them, this would be interesting to read more on.
            Best wishes
            Andrewo
            Harbinger of Rhubarb tales

            Comment


            • #21
              Just like growing in the greenhose or garden border Andrew. The hardest part is cutting the hole to fit the pots in.

              Bernard Salt - gardening under plastic

              Not just Toms either

              http://www.nicholsgardennursery.com/strawbales.htm

              More info

              http://www.pioneerthinking.com/kg_strawbale.html

              and more...

              http://msucares.com/pubs/infosheets/is1678.pdf#search='growing%20in%20straw%20bales'

              had enough yet

              http://www.motherearthnews.com/top_a...s_in_the_Straw
              Last edited by Lesley Jay; 31-03-2006, 01:33 PM.
              ntg
              Never be afraid to try something new.
              Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark.
              A large group of professionals built the Titanic
              ==================================================

              Comment


              • #22
                Thanks, much appreciated.

                Further info on hotbeds:
                http://www.gardenorganic.org.uk/todo...aqs.php?id=162
                Last edited by Lesley Jay; 31-03-2006, 01:33 PM.
                Best wishes
                Andrewo
                Harbinger of Rhubarb tales

                Comment


                • #23
                  Lads are you both trying to race to 800, if you are please could you stop and post more than one line all the time. Its not the one line I have a problem with it's the fact that I'm on dial up and all the avatars take ages to load up. As both of you have photos I end up watching paint dry on my computer screen.
                  Jax

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                  • #24
                    Sorry Jax.
                    Best wishes
                    Andrewo
                    Harbinger of Rhubarb tales

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Now I'm a happy bunny. I find both of your posts to the vine so important. Both of you have so much good information to share that I know I can say on many Grapes behalf, me included, Keep the posts coming as we learn so much. When it comes to Vegetable growing I know so little. This year I have been caught in the trap of being over eager to sow seed and as a result have had the propagators going full time but due to the lack of natural light and heat little has grown, as I would have liked. If I had paid more attention to the more experienced grapes such as yourselves, I would only have sown onion seed and little else until now. I think what I am saying is I know that you have so much quality help to give, I vote for quality rather than quantity every time. Plus my dial up was driving me mad
                      Jax

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