Sawyer Rob
Super Member
Yukon Gold potatoes, Big Boy and Roma Tomatoes,
SR
SR

That's my post above. I don't think I should have done the root saturation method for epsom salts and I used too much. I'm from the more is better crowd and this happens sometimes.I put some epsom salts on my tomatoes last week and we seemed to have an overnight positive response. The leaves are much greener and the plants look stronger. The green tomatoes are bigger. It did rain overnight so the growth and tomato size might be from that but the greener plant I think is from the epsom salts.
I didn't have a sprayer so mixed two TBSP of salts into two gallons of water and saturated the roots of three plants with that mixture. I also sprinkled some over the tops of the plants.
If three plants got two TBSP that means each plant got saturated and sprinkled with two tsp of salts in water.
Great idea and I'm glad I did it. Foliar spray is probably a better idea but I also saw mention of the root saturation method and that worked for me.

What do you do to keep the slices from getting rubbery in storage? Whole cukes hold up OK, but if I do sliced ones they don't stay crisp. The cukes that I don't see until they're oversized get made into relish.
I'll can beans, but not pickle them. Tried it once, didn't like the result.
If you could.Wife uses pickle crisp to make em crispier. Its a lime of some sort, soakem in it for a bit then rinse em off. Can't remember if it was before pickling or after but I'd guess before. I can ask her if you like.
We have a bumper crop of cukes this year, can only fit so many jars of refrigerator pickles in the fridge.
If you could.
We have a bumper crop of cukes this year, can only fit so many jars of refrigerator pickles in the fridge.
Garden is doing very well this year, quite a change from last! On our 3rd cutting of broccoli, as noted cukes are going gangbusters. Corn not quite ready yet, but looks like more ears than usual. Gotta put my strobe out next few days. Lots of blossoms on the squash.
Think this'll be my last year of potatoes for a while. Last 5 years or so they've been meh at best. Don't know if it's the weather or something in the soil they need that's depleted. Historically, potatoes have been a major crop around here, not so much for eating but for starch. From what I've heard, this property was mostly potato fields 100 or so years ago.
Thanks for the tips! Oak leaves, huh? Have to give it a try...keep things in the family.Add pickle crisp (calcium chloride)to jars if you can find it it not grape or oak leaves can add the tannins needed. She said she has gotten away from using pickling lime (calcium hydroxide) as it takes more work. With the pickling lime though you soak them and then thoroughly wash before putting into jars and filling with your brine.
A bit too cold to grow them this far north, though they do grow in the southern part of the state.I got three (3) peaches off of my tree this year!First time I've ever beat the squirrels.
Last year all my apples were super loaded. Almost more fruit than leaves.A bit too cold to grow them this far north, though they do grow in the southern part of the state.
Speaking of fruit trees...is anyone else (especially in the northeast) having a really bad year for apples? I've got maybe 10 on one of my trees, none on the other. Even the wild apple trees are pretty barren this year.