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Owned by Trevon

Growers Central

Public • 11 • Free

Growers Unite! Join us to learn skills and best practices for plant propagation, food production, and self reliance from like-minded people.

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6 contributions to Growers Central
Introduce Yourself Here🌱
Welcome to Growers Central! We're glad to have you. Tell us about you! What do you grow?🧑‍🌾 What do you hope to learn or get out of this group?🤔 We want to know!
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New comment 1h ago
0 likes • 5h
@Tes P You're in the right place! Food forests are a great concept that I'm actively exploring. Have you heard of dorodango? It's a fun natural materials art project. I made a dorodango ball this summer with 100% dirt.
0 likes • 1h
@Tes P I just watched the Nito Project one and then kept experimenting until I got it right. It does take patience though. You gotta trust the process and just keep going. My first attempts were when I was 13 years old when there weren't any resources available online. Now it's much easier to learn. Also, the video shows him using fine straw to strengthen the core. I was never able to make that work. The straw always made it to the outside layer and ruined it. You don't need it.
Who would have thought
Several months ago, I was walking around Utah State University campus, as I often do, looking for edible plants to eat or propagate, when I stumbled upon a strange plant. I got my phone out to take a picture and look it up and to my surprise, it was a pistachio tree! 6 months ago If you would have asked me where pistachio trees can grow, I would have said "not here!" I assumed they didn't go dormant and couldn't handle cold winters of northern Utah. I guess it helps to not assume. Today the pistachios were finally ready to pick and they are DELICIOUS. You can eat them fresh or roast them. I'll be cold stratifying a bunch of them this winter in hopes that a few will begin to grow in the spring. When they're ready, I'll graft a branch from the producing variety on campus onto my seedlings. This will ensure good fruit and earlier production. (3-5 years instead of 5-10) Wish me luck!
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New comment 2h ago
Who would have thought
1 like • 17h
@Timothy Smith oh I have hawthorns! What do you do with them? Are they just ornamental?
2 likes • 13h
@Alexa Teo Yes! But they can be I little picky they grow best in areas with hot summers and cool winters. Growing in Romania would be tough because it's not dry enough. It's possible in Southern Romania with enough care. Summer temperatures should range from about 25°C to 40°C. They need winter temperatures between 0°C and 7°C for 500–1,500 hours to flower and fruit.
WAIT! Your not done yet.🍂
The days are getting shorter. You might be thinking it's time to clean up the garden and pack things away for the winter But you might be wrong. Well, you'll still need to do the regular winter prep stuff but, here are some other tasks you might want to do as well.👇 1. Collect and prepare seed for stratification. Most good varieties of fruit and nut trees don't grow true to seed but some are likely enough to produce good fruit that its worth a shot if you have some extra space. Here are some to try: Apples Pawpaw Persimmon Chestnut Hazelnut Heartnut (type of walnut) Pecan Mulberry Service Berry (a.k.a. June berry, Saskatoon) Seaberry 2. Mark trees before leaves fall. I don't know about you but I'm no master at identifying dormant plants. There a few plants around town or off the side of a road that I have plans to take cuttings from this fall but I first need to mark them before they lose their leaves so I can pick them out from amongst the other plants once they've gone dormant. 3. Collect Hardwood Cuttings After plants go dormant but before the ground freezes, Prepare and store cuttings to root in the early spring. Here are some plants to try it with. Currants Gooseberries Grapes Blueberries Mulberries Elderberries Seaberries Kiwi (hardy) Fig Pomegranate Quince Hazelnut 4. Order dormant trees and shrubs. You can't propagate a plant if you don't have access to it. If you don't know anyone with the plant you want and can't find it anywhere where you live, you're going to have to buy one. You could just go to the tree nursery and buy one for 1 or 2 hundred dollars. They could be cheaper if you catch them on sale. Or You could order bare root plants online for a fraction of the cost. Single plants are often $25 I've seen bundles of 10 high quality fruit trees for as little as $54 Anyway. If you love to grow things. The work doesn't need to stop after the growing season is over. Fall is full of activities you can do to help you grow more food with less work.
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New comment 2d ago
WAIT! Your not done yet.🍂
1 like • 2d
@Timothy Smith Oh my! What tipped you off that it was upside-down? Did you have roots growing from the top? I met someone near me who offered to let me dig up some of their suckering seaberry plants this fall. So I'm pretty excited. I made seaberry lemonade a few weeks ago and it was phenomenal.
Welcome David Taylor!🎉
We're glad to have you here as one of the founding members of this new community. More information about plant propagation including grafting is to come. Feel free to ask questions or chime in as the community grows.
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Just do the thing.
Let me put something out there that's mostly for my own sake. But maybe you can relate. It's something I don't think gets enough consideration. Growing trees in containers... Hear me out. There are lots of reasons you might want to do this. Maybe you're living in an apartment with nowhere to plant a tree. Or Maybe you own a home with a yard but you don't know how long you'll be staying and don't want to plant a tree that you won't see bear fruit. You tell yourself, "one day, when I have land, I'll finally plant the garden or food Forest of my dreams" Or in other words, "I'm going to put off building an essential skill so that when the 'one day' finally comes to implement the skill I won't have it" Well this post is to remind you (me) that YOU (I) DON'T HAVE TO WAIT to get started. Start something from seed. Root a cutting. Or just buy a tree from a nursery. Put it near a window or on your deck or patio. Learn to care for it. Practice grafting or layering with it and then when "one day" comes you'll be ready. AND you got to enjoy the wait.🙌 This fall I'm going to order some good bare-root dwarf rootstocks and then in late winter I'll start grafting some of my favorite varieties onto them.
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New comment 5d ago
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Trevon Campbell
3
45points to level up
@trevon-campbell-9640
Plant science nerd🤔 I love to grow food. My primary interest is in tree crops.

Active 45m ago
Joined Sep 12, 2024
INTP
Northern Utah
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