Yob
Hop to it
erm...
na mate, the bines will have a larger girth than that little thing.OneEye said:One of Smurtos zomes. There's two of these double leafed shoots popping up and, considering that the humulus lupulus is a dicot, that falls in line with what I was expecting.
Whats the mulch for? to deter mould?Yob said:na mate, the bines will have a larger girth than that little thing.
@ kahlerisms - get em in the soil if you can, re pot to larger pots is fine, get the biggest pots you can, you want soil to within about an inch of the top of the pot so you can mulch the last inch...
:icon_cheers:
kahlerisms said:They're in pots, they're in the soil. They've been there since last year when I had a whopping 14gram harvest.
The thing is there's maybe 6-8 inches of pot above the soil line. my question is:
1) Should I do anything?
2) If so, should I pile soil on top to the rim of the pot and wait until my little hop ******* friends work their way through it
3) OR, should I dig the crowns up and plant them as close to the top of the pot as I can, so they can grow down more this year
i would agree, in my limited experience with gardening, minimising disturbance to the root system is always important and would probably take precedent over attempting to get the zome an inch or two closer to the top of the soil. worst case scenario if you leave it alone is waiting a few extra days for the bines to show up. the flip side has risks of damaging the root system.Punkal said:I am no expert but everything I have read has said to plant them close to the surface. If I was in your position I would try to tip everything you have in out keeping it all together and then put new potting mix in and then put the old mix on top and backfill the edges. I am no expert or even a novice green thumb but trying to reduce the disturbance to the plant sounds like a good idea.
Also for the guys in Sydney. Should we be worried with all the rain we have been having?
Wow! that seems a remarkably simple idea that I'd not thought of.Punkal said:I am no expert but everything I have read has said to plant them close to the surface. If I was in your position I would try to tip everything you have in out keeping it all together and then put new potting mix in and then put the old mix on top and backfill the edges.
I'm no expert Kahlerisms but if it was me I'd try and pull the whole lot out of the pot, feather the edges of the mass with your fingers and repot them either in bigger pots or by adding soil to the bottom of the current pots and bringing them closer to the top of the pot (no sense wasting space needed for root growth). Growing in pots restricts drainage so you should always use good potting mix. Potting mix breaks down over time so needs renewal every year or so, hence why plants sink into the pots.kahlerisms said:Wow look at all you guys with shoots already.
Last year I didn't plant until September. I haven't even looked yet to see if I've got shoots this year and i've got four more plants.
A question for the more experienced growers on transplanting. I have 2 x Wilamette and 2x Tetnang in pots from last year. The pots have quite a bit of head space at the top.
My initial thought was to dig up my rhizomes (I think they'd be crown-like now) and replant them a lot closer to the top of the pot (with a lot more soil) but it's now also occurred to me to just top the pot up to the rim and wait for the shoots to make it to the top.
Any thoughts?
I tried to dig one up once but it seemed pretty fragile. I think if I do try again it'll be with a lot of water so the soil is looser.
New this is year are 4x Cascade in two huge half barrels. I planted them in early July but hadn't thought to go check them out yet. Will do today.
I will be building a timelapse camera this weekend to document the growth of all my plants this year.
OneEye...that's a weed. Hop shoots look like baby asaparagus.OneEye said:My Victoria has too... Looks a little different to yours though
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