⚠️ This forum has been restored as a read-only archive so the knowledge shared by the community over many years remains available. New registrations and posting are disabled.

All times are UTC + 8 hours




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 3 posts ] 
Author Message
PostPosted: Aug 11th, '12, 01:25 
Newbie
Newbie

Joined: Jul 29th, '12, 03:42
Posts: 48
Gender: Male
Are you human?: yes
Location: Sandhills of North Carolina, USA
The winter dirt garden usually has collards, turnips, kale, swiss chard, and mustard greens. I gave up on beets and spinach because the severe nutrient deficiencies in this white, pure quartz sand that pretends to be soil around here just don't allow these to thrive no matter how much wood ash and lime I give them.

Any reason that any of these shouldn't be successful in an AP system?

I'd love to try some endive, escarole, romaine lettuce, chinese cabbage, and bok choi too.


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
    Advertisement
 
PostPosted: Aug 11th, '12, 01:55 
Almost divorced
Almost divorced
User avatar

Joined: Apr 16th, '12, 11:43
Posts: 1444
Location: 'Kooinda Bindi', Muckenburra
Gender: Male
Are you human?: family Hominidae
Location: deep in the bush north of Perth, WA, Oz
From what I understand beet and spinach will perform well in an AP system, but I am only a couple of months ahead of you and am no AP expert. I am, however, growing silverbeet on a raft in my FT, as well as in my 'soil' for a growth rate comparison.
Like you, I have white, infertile sand for soil and it certainly presents some challenges. I had a good laugh when I first heard the locals up here referring to their sand as 'silver loam'. At least it is easy to dig! :D
Good luck, DamselandDread!


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
PostPosted: Aug 11th, '12, 02:50 
Newbie
Newbie

Joined: Jul 29th, '12, 03:42
Posts: 48
Gender: Male
Are you human?: yes
Location: Sandhills of North Carolina, USA
If I've got the "divided by a common language" thing right, your silverbeet is my Swiss Chard so that's good to hear.

I've seen pictures of some amazing AP cabbages, but I can't get cabbage without worms in it unless I spend more money on floating row cover than it costs to buy cabbage in the grocery store.

I'm a Yankee and the thing I love most about having moved south is the ability to garden all winter. Though if I'd have known that collards (a regional favorite largely unknown in other parts of the US), were so delicious and so hardy I'd have tried them in New England in the same plastic tunnel I used to carry lettuce into the early part of winter. They might have lived under the snow until spring.


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 3 posts ] 

All times are UTC + 8 hours


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  

Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group
Portal by phpBB3 Portal © phpBB Türkiye
[ Time : 0.062s | 13 Queries | GZIP : Off ]