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Showing posts with label fertilizer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fertilizer. Show all posts

Monday, April 01, 2013

April First - April Fool's Day

April Fool’s Day, is not officially considered a holiday, is most definitely a notable day that is celebrated in many countries on April 1. The thing that is so special about April 1 (April Fools) is that it is the day for playing hoaxes and practical jokes of varied sophistication on others. The aim of these jokes is to bring embarrassment to the gullible.

Superstitions have it that the practical jokes are meant to be played before noon, and that those that are performed afterwards will bring bad luck to the perpetrator. This limitation is widely losing it’s value as a superstition as it is believed to have been conspired up by annoyed parents and school teachers who were wanting a respite from the day of pranks, as well due to the fact that many major hoaxes throughout history have appeared after noon. Another superstition is that anyone who fails to respond in the proper spirit of tolerance and amusement to the jokes played on them is also said to be liable to suffer from bad luck. Weaker sources indicated that being fooled by a pretty girl will be accompanied by marriage, or at bare minimum a friendship with her. That sounds like a good deal if she is truely pretty and it’s not just April Fools. Along the lines of relationships some people believe that being married onApril Fools’ Day is not a good idea for a man, and that forever in the future he will be ruled by his wife.

The origin of April Fool’s day is not clearly known, but it is generally accepted to have come about as a result to the changes in the calendar system. The New Year celebrations used to begin on 25 March and last for a week, ending on 1 April. In 1582, King Charles IX of France brought in the new Gregorian calendar, in which the new year began on 1 January. Unfortunately, some people did not hear about the change, and many others simply refused to break the tradition. These people became the object of so-called ‘fool’s errands’ and tests of gullibility.



Copied with permission from: http://plrplr.com/44571/april-fools-day/

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

GARDENING TIP



Depending on what you are going to do with them, there are many different varieties of tomatoes.  There are juicy ones and meaty ones, large ones and small ones, round ones and long ones, some are good for sauces and some good for sandwiches, green ones, red ones, and even yellow ones.  Romas are very meaty and not so juicy so these are the best for sauces and salsa, and Beefsteak and Betterboys are very juicy and are the best for sandwiches or salads.


We usually plant our tomatoes around this time of year every year.  If you start them from seeds start them indoors around march so they have plenty of time to get big and strong before they are planted outdoors.  They should be about 6 to 10 inches before planting outdoors.  We usually throw the seeds and skins back into our garden from canning and we get "volunteers".  These plants are just as good as the ones you started indoors or have bought at the store.  Usually these ones are much more hardy because they have made it through the winter, and as they say "only the strong survive".

Here is a great way to plant your tomatoes.  After  tilling with a rototiller, or which ever means you use to loosen the soil in  the area you are going to plant your tomatoes, make a furrow with a hoe about 5" to 6" deep.  Lay the plants in   the furrow spaced out at least 2 feet apart so they have room to branch out.  BEFORE YOU COVER THE PLANTS, mix up some fertilizer or root stimulator in a watering can and sprinkle it on the roots.  This will give them the boost they need to get over the shock of being transplanted.  Cover the plants with soil up over the first set of leaves.  This will stimulate new leaf growth, new roots will grow all the way up to the point where the soil stops, and by covering up higher on the stem, it will make them sturdier and if the wind blows they will remain standing.  It is a good idea to put tomato cages or stakes to hold up the plants so the fruit does not lay on the ground and rot. We put ours on right away as soon as we plant as they are way to hard to get on later.



There are many diseases and physical disorders that tomatoes suffer form and I have had the unfortunate experience of dealing with a few of them.  I usually use the internet to figure them out and how to fix them.  Here is a link to the site I usually use.

http://www.extension.iastate.edu/publications/pm1266.pdf

I hope this helps.

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OLOE