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Post by chaosisapony on Jul 14, 2024 18:41:59 GMT
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kimi
Full Member
Posts: 221
Aug 11, 2020 21:47:04 GMT
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Post by kimi on Jul 14, 2024 18:54:05 GMT
I'm also in CA, but didn't experience the heatwave (I'm near SF). My blueberries, zucchinis, bush bean, pole beans, & peas are doing well. My tomatoes have just started flowering.
No pest/disease issues yet.
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Post by crazy4scraps on Jul 14, 2024 18:59:27 GMT
I’m not really a gardener by any stretch, but I do have a row of raspberry bushes alongside my driveway and they have gone gangbusters this year with all the rain. Also, after three years of doing nothing, my tiny blueberry bushes produced a few berries this year which had me so excited! On the rain garden front at the lake cabin, all the milkweed seeds I intentionally planted in the spring near our lakeshore for butterfly habitat have exploded and I’ve already seen 6-7 monarchs floating around the yard.
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Post by chaosisapony on Jul 14, 2024 19:10:51 GMT
I’m not really a gardener by any stretch, but I do have a row of raspberry bushes alongside my driveway and they have gone gangbusters this year with all the rain. Also, after three years of doing nothing, my tiny blueberry bushes produced a few berries this year which had me so excited! On the rain garden front at the lake cabin, all the milkweed seeds I intentionally planted in the spring near our lakeshore for butterfly habitat have exploded and I’ve already seen 6-7 monarchs floating around the yard. That's awesome! My raspberries did really good this year too but they're being munched on by the grasshoppers so I'm not expecting a fall crop like I'd normally get. My mom has milkweed planted at her place and she gets monarchs and caterpillars usually in September. I'd love to see some pics of your butterfly habitat and butterflies if you get a chance!
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Post by Scrapper100 on Jul 14, 2024 19:53:45 GMT
In Southern California My plants are growing and I’m waiting for some tomatoes to get ripe. I have squished 15 horn worms so far. I need to go back out with the black light and check for more tonight. My pepper plant is still pretty small and only has two blooms.
I am enjoying but I have definitely spent more on plants than what I am going to harvest. I am really looking forward to some tomatoes though.
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Sarah*H
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,030
Jun 25, 2014 20:07:06 GMT
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Post by Sarah*H on Jul 14, 2024 20:27:40 GMT
I just got home from vacation (in Colorado and California during the heatwave) and my garden did not fare well in my absence. It was extremely hot at home as well. I made arrangements to have everything watered but it was not done frequently enough. I'm not sure the flowers in my flower boxes will recover. I've been moving the sprinkler around all day trying to start the recovery process. My zucchini plant has one tiny zucchini on it - that's unheard of, we're usually overwhelmed with them by this point. The herbs are barely hanging on, the basil is so shriveled that I wanted to cry. I had 3 small ripe tomatoes this morning. The peppers are faring better - it looks like it will be a bumper crop eventually. And the cucumber is doing great, I harvested three this morning. I hate cucumbers.
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Post by littlemama on Jul 14, 2024 21:29:01 GMT
My pepper plant never took off, my stand up summer squash plant is doing fairly well- lost one to squirrels and a second very small one was rotting on the vine. Squirrels have started taking a cherry tomato, eating half and leaving the rest for us to clean up. My radishes didnt work out, but that is because of how I planted them.
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Post by Merge on Jul 14, 2024 21:29:39 GMT
The hurricane flattened my native pollinator garden. All the potted stuff I brought inside, so it's still doing it's thing.
I just got some collard and kale seeds I'm going to direct-sow as edible ornamentals for the fall.
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Post by mom on Jul 14, 2024 21:33:30 GMT
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Post by lisae on Jul 14, 2024 21:42:27 GMT
This is not a good summer. It isn't the heat so much as the drought. No one has gotten much rain here but some communities around us have had more than us. We haven't seen it this dry in years. Since early June we have had just over 1/2 inch rain total. I'm watering to keep the plants alive and hoping we get some rain so my dahlias will bloom again for fall.
I had beautiful hydrangeas and my early glads were nice as it was very rainy in the spring. I still have some glads left to bloom but the ones that are actually producing stalks aren't opening. The dahlias have buds on them but many aren't opening. DH's tomatoes are the only bright spot as they have started producing. A ground hog plowed through one of my relatives garden and ate almost everything. They were going to replant but it's so hot and dry, they have just given up.
The one other bright spot are my potted plants. I'm watering every other day and so far they look good.
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Post by chaosisapony on Jul 14, 2024 23:12:17 GMT
mom Lovely photos! I really like your pots of mixed plants, so gorgeous. In Southern California My plants are growing and I’m waiting for some tomatoes to get ripe. I have squished 15 horn worms so far. I need to go back out with the black light and check for more tonight. My pepper plant is still pretty small and only has two blooms. I am enjoying but I have definitely spent more on plants than what I am going to harvest. I am really looking forward to some tomatoes though. Oh my god don't get me started on hornworms. Usually this time of year I pull 10-20 off PER NIGHT. But they are strangely absent this year. I'm grateful for that especially since I have all of these other pests destroying things. I just got home from vacation (in Colorado and California during the heatwave) and my garden did not fare well in my absence. It was extremely hot at home as well. I made arrangements to have everything watered but it was not done frequently enough. I'm not sure the flowers in my flower boxes will recover. I've been moving the sprinkler around all day trying to start the recovery process. My zucchini plant has one tiny zucchini on it - that's unheard of, we're usually overwhelmed with them by this point. The herbs are barely hanging on, the basil is so shriveled that I wanted to cry. I had 3 small ripe tomatoes this morning. The peppers are faring better - it looks like it will be a bumper crop eventually. And the cucumber is doing great, I harvested three this morning. I hate cucumbers. I would have cried if I came home from vacation to a crispy garden. That sucks. I'm sure everything will perk up now that you're home. I'm picking 5 cucumbers every day. I give away 3/4 of them to people with chickens, goats, etc and I still cannot eat enough to keep up with production. It makes me hate cucumbers too lol. This is not a good summer. It isn't the heat so much as the drought. No one has gotten much rain here but some communities around us have had more than us. We haven't seen it this dry in years. Since early June we have had just over 1/2 inch rain total. I'm watering to keep the plants alive and hoping we get some rain so my dahlias will bloom again for fall. I had beautiful hydrangeas and my early glads were nice as it was very rainy in the spring. I still have some glads left to bloom but the ones that are actually producing stalks aren't opening. The dahlias have buds on them but many aren't opening. DH's tomatoes are the only bright spot as they have started producing. A ground hog plowed through one of my relatives garden and ate almost everything. They were going to replant but it's so hot and dry, they have just given up. Ok this is a stupid question but are you under drought water restrictions? Even in our drought years here my garden gets plenty of water from my timers and drip irrigation. Maybe it's done differently in states where you all typically get a lot of rainfall in the summer. Where I live it's bone dry from the end of May through Thanksgiving normally so irrigating with drip, sprinklers, or even just watering by hand everyday is necessary.
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Post by lisae on Jul 15, 2024 1:05:32 GMT
Ok this is a stupid question but are you under drought water restrictions? Even in our drought years here my garden gets plenty of water from my timers and drip irrigation. Maybe it's done differently in states where you all typically get a lot of rainfall in the summer. Where I live it's bone dry from the end of May through Thanksgiving normally so irrigating with drip, sprinklers, or even just watering by hand everyday is necessary. There are no water restrictions. We have a huge yard and watering the grass just isn't possible. Almost no one waters their grass here. We water our plants with hoses and buckets but it isn't the same as rain. My plants are also spread out around the property so watering with sprinklers would be very time consuming and wasteful. We aren't used to temperatures in the 90's every day and almost no rain. It's very rare to have it go on this long. If it were a regular thing, I'm sure we would come up with some other arrangement for water. I still have a well though I don't use it. I also would have planted different things had I known. We had a beautiful summer weatherwise last year. It rained frequently all summer.
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teddyw
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,159
Jun 29, 2014 1:56:04 GMT
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Post by teddyw on Jul 15, 2024 3:37:24 GMT
I’m in the Midwest and some things are great and some not so much. My biggest issue are deer. I put up fencing around my raised beds and they just lean over it. I have a cherry Romero that’s just gone crazy. It might be 7 ft tall if I could tie it all the way up so that’s their favorite.
Peppers are a flop. I did seed starts and bought plants. Only the hot ones are producing.
Slugs and earwigs are getting basil and some ornamentals.
My zucchini will have babies and then rot when they’re about 4 inches long.
My dahlias are huge and bushy. I planted too many though.
I did plant a papyrus in one of my pots with other flowers. The heat is turning it brown.
We have a vacation coming up and I haven’t found anyone to water yet. My DDs will be on their own vacations at the same time. I don’t have the kind of neighbors that would do it. They mostly work a lot or don’t speak English.
I’m wondering if the pet sitting apps might offer that service.
I haven’t had hornworms at this house yet.
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Post by chaosisapony on Jul 15, 2024 3:51:29 GMT
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Post by papersilly on Jul 15, 2024 17:51:25 GMT
my cucumbers got decimated by powdery mildew. i am so sad about it. it started off so well. i was growing them in containers and i guess there wasn't enough airflow between the trellis and a wood slat wall behind it (even though the slats were small and had spaces between them.
good news is that i have some other cucumber that i planted i the ground and they are really thriving.
the zucchinis are growing really well. this is my first year growing them and they are in containers on my deck. i don't eat zucchinis but i just wanted to see how easy they would be to grow and how well they would do in containers. i am giving all the fruit to my next door neighbor. she will be drowning in zucchini this summer.
the eggplants are kicking in but the bell peppers were a bust. the strawberries were just ok.
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Post by Sorrel on Jul 15, 2024 18:03:08 GMT
I’m in Denver. My tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers are doing great. I have everything on drip lines in raised beds. Flea beetles decimated all my leafy greens and it is too hot now for them or most herbs. I might grow some inside in my AeroGarden.
Spider mites got to one of my rosebushes and a couple of my native perennials, but I cut everything back and sprayed them with isopropyl alcohol and neem oil so hopefully I arrested that. My two peach trees are producing fruit for the first time, but we had a massive hail storm that knocked off two thirds of the fruit, ugh. In any case I plan on making tons of tomato sauce, salsa, and pesto to freeze.
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teddyw
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,159
Jun 29, 2014 1:56:04 GMT
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Post by teddyw on Jul 16, 2024 20:30:31 GMT
Thanks @chaosisapony papersilly plants in that family tend to get powdery mildew. I’ve never not had it when I plant squash, pumpkins, & zucchini. Can’t say on the cucumbers because I always get cucumber beetles that kill them. If they make it past powdery mildew I almost always get squash vine borers.
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Post by papersilly on Jul 16, 2024 21:03:51 GMT
Thanks @chaosisapony papersilly plants in that family tend to get powdery mildew. I’ve never not had it when I plant squash, pumpkins, & zucchini. Can’t say on the cucumbers because I always get cucumber beetles that kill them. If they make it past powdery mildew I almost always get squash vine borers. the zucchini have been mildew free and beetle free so far (knock on wood). i check for signs everyday and so far so good. the cucumbers are another story. no bugs but mildew for sure. the fruit is very misshapen. it still flowers but now they are mostly male flowers and hardly, if any, female. ugh.
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Post by LavenderLayoutLady on Jul 20, 2024 13:01:26 GMT
How is your garden doing? My garden isn't so great this year. I had a promising start. I have a new neighbor out back (His is a rental house). Apparently he hates anything that isn't cement. He got a huge bottle of Round Up that you attach to a hose, and went ham on his whole side yard, which is next to my 6 ft fence and the whole span of my next door neighbor's backyard. Overspray hit a lot of my veggie garden and destroyed it. Plus perennial flowers that have been there decades. My next door neighbor's back yard is absolutely fried 3 feet into their property line (they have a chainlink fence, which rental neighbor sprayed right into). I spoke to him, mid-spray, but it was too late. He plans on spraying the grass & weeds on his landlord's over & over again throughout the summer, winter, and spring, until "All that's left is dirt." His words. From the short conversation I had with him, plus the violent and vile screaming that he & his wife throw at each other and their dog, I've decided that my approach will be to avoid them, and hope they move out when their lease is up. I also put up tarps all along my fence to try to block and additional spraying. I planted some patio tomatoes and trident peppers, herbs and squash, in pots on the deck (far away from spray), but I am a bit defeated. It is neighbors like them that make homeowners hate renters. I am enjoying but I have definitely spent more on plants than what I am going to harvest. This is true for me as well. Squirrels have started taking a cherry tomato, eating half and leaving the rest for us to clean up. I read somewhere (might have been here) that the animals are looking for a water source when they do that (they did that so much to my tomatoes last year). I have four shallow dishes of water that I refill every day and only two (Big Boy) tomatoes have been taken whole (by a raccoon), and no one-bite squirrel messes this year so far.
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Post by craftedbys on Jul 20, 2024 13:23:30 GMT
We are up to our eyeballs in tomatoes! On a lark, I weighed my harvest of about four days.
NINETEEN POUNDS. Yes, nineteen pounds and that did not take into consideration my eating a tomato sandwich everyday, DH taking tomatoes in his lunch, and having tomatoes at supper, either sliced, in a salad, or as part of the main dish.
I sent some to work with DS and gave some to a pal at the gym.
We put in three plants of small tomatoes (Super Sweet 100s, grape tomatoes, and a Husky Cherry) and four slicer plants (Early Girl, Better Boy, and two others). We have put up all kinds of stakes and lattice for the vines of the small plants.
Last year, I stripped all of the vines in late October before the first hard freeze and put tons in the freezer. Just a few weeks ago, I got out all of the tomatoes I still had (about 4 gallons) and cooked them down for sauce, made about a gallon.
I planted three pepper plants this year, and they aren't really producing, which is disappointing since I wanted to try some different flavors of pepper jam.
Our one small cucumber vine has given us a few. DH helped make some refrigerator dill slices, and I made my own bread and butter slices. His are ok, mine are so tasty I have been eating them straight feom the jar.
My hydrangea bushes are big and green and leafy, but mostly bloomless. One bush only produced one bloom, two others gave me about four, and two smaller plants nave me nothing.
I managed to get some cuttings from various hydrangeas to root, so hopefully, they will grow strong enough to survive the winter.
People talk about my green thumb, but my gardening ability is basically digging a hole and putting the plant in and saying "grow." I don't know anything about soil ph or what fertilizer to use, I just water and hope for the best.
Oh, and I would welcome any tomato recipes!
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Tearisci
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,247
Nov 6, 2018 16:34:30 GMT
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Post by Tearisci on Jul 20, 2024 13:32:49 GMT
We got started planting too late and the Texas heat has really taken a toll on my garden. I've only had 3 zucchini and none of our planned squash. My rosemary and thyme are doing ok but the basil bit it pretty early.
I have 2 plants of flowers, sunpatiens, that have done pretty well and my roses are out of control, but veggies, not so much.
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Post by chaosisapony on Jul 20, 2024 18:16:21 GMT
craftedbys 19 pounds is amazing! I am picking cherry tomatoes by the basketful right now. They're eaten with every meal and as a snack a couple times a day. I made a massive bowl of pico and took it to work to share and tonight I'm making another one to keep at home. I'm going to get a mouth sore from my tomato consumption any day now I just know it. I will have to weigh mine the next time I pick. I'm sure it's not 19 pounds but I wouldn't be surprised for it to be 5 or 6. Now cucumbers are another story. I absolutely would have 19 pounds of cucumbers! LavenderLayoutLady Your garden being killed by someone's overspray hurts my heart. When I first moved in here my very nice neighbor would "help" me by spraying weeds along our shared fence line and sort of fling it up onto my property. Spraying and mowing is a constant battle here since it's the country and it's not like there's a lawn in my yard so I did appreciate his help. Except he started to hit my flowers. We talked about it and now he's a lot more careful and doesn't fling the spray onto my side and I just try to keep important plants planted farther away from the borders of the property. The neighbor on the other side is a historic church. There's no services or anything but some volunteers come by a few times a year to mow and do maintenance. I planted a bunch of native wildflowers on my part of the property that is next to theirs. There is no fence. Well the caretaker, again a super nice guy, "helps" me every year by hopping on his riding mower and mowing down all of my wildflowers. Most of them don't even get a chance to bloom. I won't ever say anything to him as he's a volunteer and his mowing actually does help me out a lot. I'm just going to have to plant my wildflowers somewhere else.
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Post by Scrapper100 on Jul 20, 2024 22:06:58 GMT
Well still not getting a lot of tomatoes. I think one of the baby squirrels has helped himself to the tomatoes. It’s a raised bed on legs so I was hoping it would keep them out but nope. I have only picked 4 cherry tomatoes and they have started to eat 3 and the worms got a couple of others.
I have one tiny green pepper started.
Also what causes the skin to be tough in homegrown tomatoes?
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breetheflea
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,584
Location: PNW
Jul 20, 2014 21:57:23 GMT
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Post by breetheflea on Jul 20, 2024 22:20:05 GMT
We had tons of cherries this year. The tomatoes are appearing but not close to ripe yet. I'm still waiting on the figs (usually they are ripe at the end of June). The snap peas are hanging on... cucumbers are not doing well, but that's normal.
I'm dealing with squash bugs and am wondering if that's why my zucchini aren't making it to picking size... grrr.
I am watering a community garden I helped set up last spring once a week and it's interesting to see how that is doing compared to my home garden... The tomatoes over there are starting to ripen, the zucchini are a lot bigger and healthier...
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teddyw
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,159
Jun 29, 2014 1:56:04 GMT
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Post by teddyw on Jul 20, 2024 22:23:41 GMT
LavenderLayoutLady can you contact the landlord? It seems ridiculous a renter is doing that Our caddy corner neighbor at the lake sprays roundup all day from the time he gets there til he leaves. We have a common area access to the lake. He sprays & mows it like it’s his. The HOA is constantly asking people to not use poisons to decrease the runoff that leads to algae. I feel like there’s no way he’s not getting cancer. It’s constant spraying. A few dandelions never hurt anyone. I picked 19 tomatoes the other day but I don’t have a scale. I gave some to my friend. No one else wants them. I also haven’t seen my neighbors in weeks. Also this is not a social neighborhood. No one else gardens. I’d happily share them. My zucchini’s grow about 4inches then rot. I’m thinking about making pasta laminated with squash flowers so I at least get something. The deer are devouring my sedums in the front landscaping. I thought they wouldn’t eat those.
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Post by Zee on Jul 21, 2024 1:09:43 GMT
I only did cucumbers, tomatoes, and peppers this year. These are new raised beds and i wasn't sure how everything would do.
So far, hornworms got my earliest tomatoes. They are gone and I got some tomatoes, but I noticed one yesterday have just ONE bite out of it. Definitely an asshole squirrel.
My peppers keep disappearing off the plant, just baby sweet peppers. I did get one pepper but that's it so far, all the rest disappear.
My cucumbers are not molested but they are making the stupidest shapes, they're squat and pointed on one end and turn yellow super quick. I hate them. I got one normal one so far. I had a tomato and cucumber salad last night--that was pretty thrilling.
My marigolds I planted among them are doing great. My planters with basil, oregano, and flat Italian parsley are doing great.
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Post by LavenderLayoutLady on Jul 27, 2024 10:38:52 GMT
can you contact the landlord? It seems ridiculous a renter is doing that I don't know who the landlord is. It's a management company in another state. The renter seems like he wouldn't be very open to discussion, and purposefully comes off as someone I should fear. So I'm not going to confront him further.
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Post by Scrapper100 on Jul 27, 2024 16:52:45 GMT
How is your garden doing? My garden isn't so great this year. I had a promising start. I have a new neighbor out back (His is a rental house). Apparently he hates anything that isn't cement. He got a huge bottle of Round Up that you attach to a hose, and went ham on his whole side yard, which is next to my 6 ft fence and the whole span of my next door neighbor's backyard. Overspray hit a lot of my veggie garden and destroyed it. Plus perennial flowers that have been there decades. My next door neighbor's back yard is absolutely fried 3 feet into their property line (they have a chainlink fence, which rental neighbor sprayed right into). I spoke to him, mid-spray, but it was too late. He plans on spraying the grass & weeds on his landlord's over & over again throughout the summer, winter, and spring, until "All that's left is dirt." His words. From the short conversation I had with him, plus the violent and vile screaming that he & his wife throw at each other and their dog, I've decided that my approach will be to avoid them, and hope they move out when their lease is up. I also put up tarps all along my fence to try to block and additional spraying. I planted some patio tomatoes and trident peppers, herbs and squash, in pots on the deck (far away from spray), but I am a bit defeated. It is neighbors like them that make homeowners hate renters. I am enjoying but I have definitely spent more on plants than what I am going to harvest. This is true for me as well. Squirrels have started taking a cherry tomato, eating half and leaving the rest for us to clean up. I read somewhere (might have been here) that the animals are looking for a water source when they do that (they did that so much to my tomatoes last year). I have four shallow dishes of water that I refill every day and only two (Big Boy) tomatoes have been taken whole (by a raccoon), and no one-bite squirrel messes this year so far. y These squirrels aren’t looking for water as we have a pond and waterfall that the squirrels have access to. They actually have a den under it and often sit on the rocks.
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Post by Merge on Jul 27, 2024 17:42:11 GMT
I refuse to grow tomatoes ever again because of the possibility of hornworms.
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Post by chaosisapony on Jul 27, 2024 18:54:00 GMT
I refuse to grow tomatoes ever again because of the possibility of hornworms. They're so gross. I do take a sick satisfaction out of finding them on the plants and giving them to the chickens to feast on though.
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