Posts Tagged ‘spring’

Growing Peppers

Sowing the seeds of the peppers in the spring to 21 degrees Celsius in seed trays or modules. Once in place, lowering the temperature to 16 degrees Celsius to grow. Once they are old enough, the transfer of seedlings from the green house of the border, more bags or large pots. If you use bags on growth, plant two or three peppers in a bag. Loosely tie the plants. Water, if necessary peppers, and eat all night strong once the fruit starts to inflate using a fertilizer tomatoes. Peppers can be harvested from mid-summer.

Choose the first fruit from green to encourage more development. Fruits can be collected in the later stages of green or color.

Peppers enjoy the same kind of growing conditions, such as tomatoes, so do the ideal companion. If you decide to grow, so make sure that the peppers grown on the sunny side of the greenhouse so they are not shaded by the faster growth of tomato plants and much higher. Many modern cucumbers produce only female flowers, but some varieties are produced in both greenhouse and female flowers, female flowers have a tiny embryo fruit behind the petals. A pinch of male flowers before they are able to fertilize the females, because it is bitter cucumbers.

The most popular type of cucumber is long, with smooth skin, and can be grown in a greenhouse. Peppers are fruits, green peppers, yellow is the first step in the process of maturation, and the final scene is red peppers. All peppers can be eaten raw or cooked. Use a clean knife and cutting off side shoots. Small can be crushed between thumb and forefinger. At the end of the growing season, tomatoes grown outdoors can be gained in the green house. Strip the lower leaves and plants to hand back.

How to Fertilize Roses

Roses thrive in a compost heap, but it must be the correct type. And while much fertilizer is good if you over-fertilize your roses will be disappointed by the results. It is best to apply fertilizer in late winter, while roses are still pending, but after cutting for the year. As the soil warms in spring, the compost will decompose and feed your roses. There are many recipes for fertilizers there – it is an ideal base to work well for most roses.

1 cup flour, cottonseed
1 cup of superphosphate (0-20-0) or bone meal
1 / 2 cup of fish meal
1 / 2 cup blood meal

There are dozens if not hundreds of fertilizers ready for sale. The only way to really know what is lacking in your soil is to test the soil. Take samples of soil from your garden, follow the instructions for testing the soil, then send soil samples to state universities for testing. Rake the fertilizer in the first two inches of soil before watering again.

If roses are a new plant bare root, do not burn the roots. In this case, wait until the plant has produced few flowers before applying fertilizer. You can also use a fertilizer applied too slow in spring, summer and fall. Add one teaspoon of chelated iron by a mixture of organic fertilizer, apply around the base of shrubs, and water. Thank you for your roses with abundant flowers.