Pea Gravel...good idea or not?
keyonne
17 years ago
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Catrina's Garden
17 years agoleftwood
17 years agoRelated Discussions
I need ideas for pole beans/peas
Comments (2)erdnuss Take a look at the online catalogue linked below. It has lots of pole and other beans, and most of the descriptions include the length of the vines for pole beans. I'm ordering pole limas, Fortex, and a pole wax bean from them this spring to add to my Smeraldo Italian pole beans saved from last year. Pole beans are much more productive over a longer period of time than bush beans. Enjoy! You'll want all of them if you could grow them! Here is a link that might be useful: Vermont Bean Seed Company...See MorePea Gravel and Weed Cloth
Comments (6)you could start saving up sheets of cardboard and newspaper (shiny stuff removed). When you can get fall leaves - shredded lays down neater - then start laying newspaper around the perennials and cardboard in larger areas. Wet it down and then place several inches of leaves over the paper/cardboard. It should smother the grass and weeds between your desired plants. You needs to reapply leaves or other mulch as it breaks down and new seeds blow in to create the next family of weeds. But its easier than dealing with weeds/grass that is tied up in landscape fabric. I guess I would just leave the gravel where it is. When I do newspaper layering, I use sections that are folded in the way that the newspaper comes, so there a a few sheets in each section. I fan then with overlapping sections in a circular fan around a plant. For trees you can fan cardboard in similar way. The key is having lots of the materials ready at one time, getting a large section done at once so you can get the paper covered adequately. Blocking the light should suppress the plants/grass below the newspaper/cardboard. If you want to use wood chips to keep the paper in place, that works great also. I actually use both chips and leaves, depending on the season. Rachel...See MoreGrowing snow peas for the tender shoots (not the peas)
Comments (7)I just had a possibly awesome idea: what if I plant snow peas like a cover crop for my plot in the late fall, and then cut them to the ground for the tasty shoots, then let them grow back (the second growth is too tough to eat as sprouts) to serve as a cover crop? In order to judge whether or not this will work I need to know 1) will they survive being cut in cool weather and 2) do they really work well at fixing nitrogen for the soil and protecting from nutrient loss? Maybe I'd better ask the folks on the soil forum about this....See MoreIs this a silly idea for beans and peas?
Comments (6)farmerdill I took a look. It is "English peas" that I am referencing. Never gave it much thought. We just call them sweet peas because of can labels? I do have wild sweet pea vines growing here, too. Of course, we don't eat them but enjoy their flowers, immensely. I find it interesting to note that sweet pea vines will flourish in the area with walnut trees (juglone). Then, I took a look online of the growth pattern of English peas and see what you mean about them being different. I appreciate the note on it. I'll be glad when I have some general growth patterns under my belt. Mostly, I've spent my time on soil biology and natural fertilizers after my first attempts failed. (Well worth it, though.) The beans and peas will be in separate areas. I'll probably just use a hardy common heirloom variety as I haven't experience to manage anything else. My goal is just to get something to grow in my soil. I'll think differently about the pea plantings. Not certain why I thought their vine growth was similar to green beans. I'll be certain to place the twin at intervals you suggest even if they're short. Tx...See Morejanet_e
17 years agoxanadu
17 years agoelad_grower
15 years agoleftwood
15 years agomikect01
14 years agobuddyrose
13 years agoGreenthumb
13 years agodaffodillady
13 years agoshepherdhill_live_com
13 years agoCarolanne
9 years agoJ L
8 years ago
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