Bugger, that's ****. Tried fox urine? I've also heard that works, but haven't tried it. It can bring more foxes though, so if you have cats or chickens, not the best idea.Danscraftbeer said:Yeah I've got the Dynamic lifter in socks at all structural access points and in the foliage as well. All around the bases etc. I thought that did the trick but it now doesn't deter them. They must literally step over it. I wet them to make them stink more but it just seems to only be an unpleasant smell to me all around my garden. Fecking possums there's a million other trees for them to eat I cant understand why they're so hell bent on my hops.
My idea of spraying them with skat is so the foliage tastes like **** and they wont eat it. I've tried wire mesh barriers, spikes, a $300 something sonic deterrent. Pretty deflating on the gardening efforts. I really cant see what will work if they really want to eat them they will. Even to climb down the fence, along the ground and up another way. These things are relentless this year more than ever. I've spent a wack on wire mesh to cage up everything else I grow but I cant cage up the entire backyard.
I just don't know. The fecking things are beating me this year.
your going to be very busy with that lotDrSmurto said:Yesterday on the left, Dec 13 on the right. Covered in burrs. Going to be an epic crop.
Re - fertilising. I add horse manure over winter. This is the first year i added any fertiliser in the growing season. Started adding dynamic lifter every 4 weeks once the first shoot appeared. Switched to potash once burrs formed.
When you fertilise with manure Smurfo do you just dump it on top of the cut back bines or do you spread it around the edges? Then cover the whole lot with mulch?DrSmurto said:Yesterday on the left, Dec 13 on the right. Covered in burrs. Going to be an epic crop.
Re - fertilising. I add horse manure over winter. This is the first year i added any fertiliser in the growing season. Started adding dynamic lifter every 4 weeks once the first shoot appeared. Switched to potash once burrs formed.
No cutting back. They do as they please.Benn said:Smurto, do you do the commercial thing and limit overall bine numbers (per plant) by cutting back excess bines early on in the season or do you let them all grow freely?
Cut back then cover the whole area with a thick layer of horse manure.Curly79 said:When you fertilise with manure Smurfo do you just dump it on top of the cut back bines or do you spread it around the edges? Then cover the whole lot with mulch?
I'd love to know just how many Chinook plants growing around Australia are descended from yours...I'm tipping it'd be a lot.DrSmurto said:No cutting back. They do as they please.
Cut back then cover the whole area with a thick layer of horse manure.
For those not aware, the first of the Chinook rhizomes was planted mid 2007 so they are very well established.
Thanks! I'll go back and look! One of the plants has a drip feeder and the other is just in a pot. Ironically it's doing the best, but it is a different variety.Mardoo said:I'd say once a day, unless we're having a string of hot days and then twice a day. Yes, in peak growth season they need a fair bit, around 10L a plant, or more even. Not precisely sure as I use weeper hoses. I usually do weepers on very low overnight in max growth season - which is now. But the amount they need is directly tied to their stage of growth. In winter/hibernation I don't water at all here in Melbourne. I did a relatively detailed post about watering in the first few pages of this thread. Don't feel like repeating the whole thing at the moment, but I can tell you next time we catch up, if you can't find it.
I hope you buy it dinner firstBenn said:I check the soil moisture by fingering it
OK, I was tripping. It was last year's plantation thread.Mardoo said:I did a relatively detailed post about watering in the first few pages of this thread.
Enter your email address to join: