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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Springtime is accelerating

 

I got a big assist from Kubota, my youngest son.

Yesterday, he got the riding mower running and flattened the weeds where the 2026 potato patch will be planted.

While he was doing that, I was pruning grapevines. This is a "before" picture


This is an "after" picture.

I cut disposable, plastic grocery bags into strips. I use them to mark the canes I want to keep. I get tunnel vision when pruning and am apt to remove material I intend to keep if I don't mark it in a big and obvious way.

Then, I use the same strips to tie the canes to the wire. The UV will shred the thin plastic before it has a chance to girdle the growing stems.

I have been shrinking the number of grapevines. I am down to one full row and two partial rows. I will probably always have some vines but apples and Asian pears are much better at paying their rent and grass/clover is much less labor to maintain.

2 hours and 40 minutes time-on-task. About 3 hours and 30 minutes by the clock start-to-finish. I still have to drag the prunings out of the orchard.

Kubota's efforts probably saved me another three hours of time. 

5 comments:

  1. Snow and ice are receding from my place. The overall temperatures are rising so expected snow flurries over the next few days will not stick.

    Raised beds are still frozen past the first knuckle but the garlics are greening up nicely.

    God is good.

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  2. My Einset had bud break 1st of March here in plant city fl. Thompson and Crimson still sleeping

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  3. Plum trees here have started to blossom; likely the cherry are not far behind.

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  4. I really like your idea of using plastic bags to make strips. I never thunked o' that. Thanks for the tip.---ken

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  5. Pears in bloom here, plums not far behind. Apples beginning to leaf out.
    Nighttime temps for the coming Sunday/Monday/Tuesday predicted to be below freezing... Mon night 19F... There goes my pear crop.

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