View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Old 20-08-2015, 06:36 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
Terry Coombs Terry Coombs is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2012
Posts: 678
Default Punkins in the berry patch

Steve Peek wrote:
On Wednesday, August 19, 2015 at 11:31:16 AM UTC-4, Terry Coombs
wrote:
The vine crop space this year is right next to the blackberry patch
, and they've been climbing . So far there are 3 pumpkins on the
vine (in the berry patch , several more on the ground), and the
weight is bringing them down . This area is just downhill from where
I was piling the chicken litter in a compost pile , and it's doing
better than anything else in the garden . This tells me that my poor
growth everywhere else is due to a shortage of nutrients - or a Ph
problem that makes them unavailable , or a combination of both .
I'll be taking samples to the county extension agent for testing .
Once I know just what the problems are I can correct them , and
maybe even get some decent crops next year - or this , if I get
results in time .

--
Snag


Well, I would guess that nitrogen is lacking. Being that the pumpkins
are doing much better than other things and they are just downhill
from the chicken manure pile one would believe that nutrients are
flowing from the pile to the plant. A major component of chicken
manure is nitrogen. In my area the soil is acidic. Farmers commonly
add lime to pastures and cropland every 2-5 years. Check with
neighbors to see if they add lime(for low Ph) or sulfur(for high Ph).
This will tell you if the local soil is sweet or acidic. The county
agent's report will help you make a more accurate additions, but you
can make additions without it.
Steve


I've started to apply some 5-1-1 fish emulsion once a week . I'm mixing
1/4 cup per gallon , one cup of solution per tomato plant . Peppers and
other smaller stuff get a little less .
On a lighter note , the Red Ripper field peas are going like gangbusters -
they're just uphill from the pumpkins ...

--
Snag