Friday, April 17, 2026

The weather is driving the bus

 

Regardless of what we want, the weather is driving the bus this time of year.

It looks like April 22 and 23 will be prime days for planting potatoes, asparagus and transplanting some broccoli. The soil will be dry enough to till and walk on.

In terms of planting nursery stock, I am balancing soil conditions against my ability to keep plants cool and dormant. Today, God willing, I will be putting thornless blackberry plants into the ground, and maybe two peach trees, one plum and four apples. The holes for the blackberries are pre-dug.

I also have some round, galvanized, 3" duct to install on some mulberry trees to deter raccoons. I need to liberally grease them with Crisco because I think they can shinny up 3" round if it is dry. The raccoons and woodchucks climb the trees to eat the berries and the woodchucks also strip and eat the leaves. They break the branches on the young saplings and is not good. Black bears cause the same problems with apple and pear trees but they are extremely uncommon in this part of Michigan. 

An accidental discovery

I lifted up the cell-pack to show the roots dangling down into the water
The seedling trays and the cell packs are different heights. The tray is deeper than the cells.

I put a stringer from a pallet, nominally 5/8" thick, in the bottom of the tray to keep the cells from sagging in the middle. Then, on a whim I added water to the tray figuring the humidity would slow down the drying-out of the potting mix.

Danged if the tomato roots didn't reach right out and start sucking up that water without my even thinking about it. They look pretty healthy. I will continue to water the plants as the potting soil dries out but it is always nice to have a back-up plan.

Today's Quicksilver music selection


 

2 comments:

  1. Is 3" galvanized duct the optimum size for preventing raccoons climbing the tree trunks? Would something like 5" or 6" work better? You would have to somehow center a larger size around the trunk, a few disks of dense flexible foam (think much larger version of pipe insulation, or maybe make your own with a form of some kind (round dish pan?) and expandable foam) or semi-rigid plastic might work.

    Do raccoons like Crisco? What happens if a heavy concentration of cayenne pepper is mixed in with it?

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  2. The deer absolutely decimate anything 'thornless' I try to plant that they have access to. The one variety of raspberries has very soft thorns when young, so have a hard time propagating that one... they usually spread like weeds on their own! Need to get more doe tags this year.

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