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General Discussion
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Subject: Two plants on opposing sides of a patch
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From
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Location
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Message
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Date Posted
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pg3 |
Lodi, California
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This isn't really the right time of year for this question, but it popped into my mind and I wanted to give voice to it. It is pretty standard practice to grow two or even three plants in a single area, then cull down to the strongest or most desirable plant. Has anyone ever attempted doing this twice, once on each opposing side of a growing-area (4-6 plants on a single plot, for example), culled down to two plants, then allow these two plants to grow towards the center of the plot? I don't know if this is worth the effort, but I would think it would give the grower more choice, since they would be able to choose between two different plants mid-season. I'd like to your thoughts on this.
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7/8/2019 6:03:07 PM
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Little Ketchup |
Grittyville, WA
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Think big-- four or six... how about 500 plants in a 40 ft diameter circle and cull 1/2 of the plants every week. By the end of ten weeks the chosen 1 plant will remain. (And then later in the fall after all that rigorous selection it will go B.E.S. on you...) Thats my thoughts.
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7/9/2019 2:26:08 AM
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Little Ketchup |
Grittyville, WA
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Its a fine idea just depends what your goal is and how much work you can do.
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7/9/2019 3:21:51 AM
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cjb |
Plymouth, MN
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What you describe is how I've grown the last couple of years. Small plot, start two plants at the opposite end of the garden. Gives the chance to get a cross you want and a little bit more insurance for early screw ups.
In practice, one corner of my garden is near a black walnut and is fairly toxic. Tomatoes die. Pumpkin tolerates but does not thrive. So unless something dramatic happens to the one plant, I pretty much know who I'm growing at the beginning of the season.
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7/9/2019 11:11:24 AM
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pg3 |
Lodi, California
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Yeah, that was my idea, to give the grower more tolerance for screw-ups. It's pretty hot where I live, so if I don't shade my mains they will wilt and die. Despite my efforts, I've already lost 2/4 of the main vines in my patch, and one of the surviving vines still got scorched. It would have been nice to have a backup plant in this particular scenario.
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7/9/2019 2:28:55 PM
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cojoe |
Colorado
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I know of growers that have room for one full sized plant that grow from opposite ends and pull one of them once they have one set on the main.
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7/10/2019 5:33:16 PM
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Total Posts: 6 |
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