My Google-Foo is out of whack today!No problem.
You are normally the one googling stuff, lol....
If I'm understanding this correctly, all hothouses are greenhouses, (just maintained at a higher temperature.) but not all greenhouses are hothouses.No problem.
You are normally the one googling stuff, lol....
What built out of? How big is it? I might just have to wait another year and see how much you get out of it.Here at the new house, we actually have a greenhouse. Never been much of a gardener, but might see what we can do with it.
Lots of the really successful gardener back home had cold frames as well.If I'm understanding this correctly, all hothouses are greenhouses, (just maintained at a higher temperature.) but not all greenhouses are hothouses.
We probably just watched the same video. I'd love to get an affordable source of coco coir.I watched a pretty long video of a huge hydroponic lettuce grower in Houston! He supplies restaurants!
50 pound feed sacks are great for that too. I just dug up some peppers that were still producing out of a bed I need to turn and put them in old feed sacks. They seem to be doing okay.We didn't do a garden this year because of the Texas Ice Age. I just didn't feel like doing one.
My idea for next year is doing a large container gardening. My brother buys his cattle protein feed in about 15 gallon tubs. I'm going to use a few of them, along with some five gallon buckets for planting as well.
Cloth or plastic feed sacks?50 pound feed sacks are great for that too. I just dug up some peppers that were still producing out of a bed I need to turn and put them in old feed sacks. They seem to be doing okay.
Or even hay bales. I've seen people growing tomatoes in hay bales. I guess if you cut a square bale in half and stick each half in a feed sack you'd have the best of both worlds. You'd probably need to be diligent about adding aged compost or tea though.
Then there are sack gardens! I have seen them both hanging or leaning next to something.We didn't do a garden this year because of the Texas Ice Age. I just didn't feel like doing one.
My idea for next year is doing a large container gardening. My brother buys his cattle protein feed in about 15 gallon tubs. I'm going to use a few of them, along with some five gallon buckets for planting as well.
Mmmm rhubarb! My gardening grandparent grew rhubarb & strawberries, that grandma mad the best ones out of!Mom used cold frames for her rhubarb. Old screen or storm door frames for the top.
Use the chicken manure to fertilize your soil and feed the fish commercial food (or raise red wiggler worms in a compost pile.Ideally I would like a hydroponic garden that recycles chicken shit into tanks of catfish that feeds the plants!
With the lake across the street I figure the water table is pretty shallow so a well would be easy enough.
The new neighbors next to me are talking big garden too! When I mention raising birds they agreed! They looked real surprised when I said converting the one car garage to a coop!
You can use greenhouses in summer but you need shade and lots of ventilation. A couple layers or Shade cloth over the roof would help as long as you have good air flow.I think the former owner had fruit trees they where going to plant, but took them with when they left.
I wonder if date palms would produce fruit in a greenhouse during the summer? There has to be somethings that could handle summers?
They will grow well in the fall and winter in a greenhouse. I grow all my greens in the winter. Collards, spinach, kale, and spinach. In winter dirt beds, onions, garlic, beets, and carrots grow well too.a greenhouse and a hothouse
green house keeps bugs away, hot house is for cool climates.
Peas and lettuce (gets thick and bitter) don't do well in hot texas climate .
They work well:Then there are sack gardens! I have seen them both hanging or leaning next to something.
They work well: