by Wally Richards
SOME GARDENING TIPS
This week I thought it would be a good idea to pass on several gardening tips which are useful at this time of year.
Growing potatoes; Firstly it depends on the soil you are growing in. Generally you should deep cultivate and incorporate a good amount of compost into the soil making a friable loam.
Make a trench about 20 cm deep to plant your seed potatoes in.
Place about half a dozen sheep manure pellets, a tablespoon of gypsum, and a level teaspoon of BioPhos and some Neem Tree Powder, cover lightly with a little soil and sit the potato on it with the eyes pointing upwards.
Cover with a soil/compost mix about 3 cm over the seed and water in with Magic Botanic Liquid.
As the shoots come through the soil, lightly cover with more mix. Keep doing this until you have a mound about 12-cm tall then allow the tops to grow.
Spray the tops two weekly with Magic Botanic Liquid and Mycorrcin. Sprinkle a few Neem Granules on the mound, by the shoots, in case of soil insects eating into the tubers.
The soil should be kept moist at all times but not wet.
If you know that the potato psyllid is a problem in your garden then you should have already planted your seed potatoes.
Later plantings should always be protected with Wallys Cell Strengthening products which make the plant’s cell so tough the psyllid can’t pierce to feed and thus they die. That’s great for tomatoes and Tree tomato (Tamarillos) if you have psyllid problems.
Here is a tip a gardener told me to reduce codlin moth damage in apples: he reckoned he is able to greatly reduce damage by sprinkling Neem Tree Granules under the apple trees at this time of the year and watering it in.
Later set up a pheromone trap; or you can use treacle in a jar lid inside a onion bag hanging in the tree) First sign of the male moths start spraying the apples (not the tree) with Neem Oil with Raingard adde; repeat about every 14 days until no more moths are trapped.
It’s the same with Guava moth: keep a coating of Wallys Super Neem Tree Oil on the fruit and the grubs are stopped from getting in and ruining the fruit.
Oxalis is a problem for many and the easy way to knock it back is with Baking Soda.
Mix a heaped tablespoon of baking soda into one litre of warm water, stir to dissolve and add one ml of Raingard. Spray the foliage of the oxalis on a sunny day when the ground is a bit on the dry side. It dehydrates the oxalis foliage without harming any other plants. New foliage will appear and this should be also treated in the same manner as soon as it shows.
If you stop the bulbs from having leaves they will run out of energy and die. Do not work the soil as this only brings fresh bulbs to the surface and extends the problem. Instead cover the soil with fresh compost and plant into this.
Another method is to use Ammonium Sulphamate called Wallys Compost Accelerator 600 grams dissolve in 3 litres of water and water that over the foliage and down into the soil where it will compost the bulbs.
I am told baking soda spray at about 3 tablespoons per litre of water is a good control of wandering willie or wandering jew. If you have that problem, try it and it should not affect other plants.
I presume the plant is sensitive to alkaline sprays.
The same solution of baking soda (one tablespoon only) and Raingard is the best spray to prevent and control powdery mildew and black spot on any plants affected with these diseases.
If you have powdery mildew on plants especially in Autumn you can return them to green quickly by spraying Wallys Super Neem Tree Oil at 5 ml per litre late in the day.
The Raingard spreads and sticks the baking soda and prevents it from washing off in the rain for up to 14 days. This also applies to all contact type sprays such as copper.
If you add Raingard to any chemical weed killers your kill effective rate will be increased by 50% according to trials I have read.
About this time every year I have gardeners complaining about their broad beans flowering but no fruit setting. (Beans are fruit technically as they have seeds inside which we eat)
The reason for no beans forming, after the flowers fall is due to no pollination, which is due to there not being any bumble bees around early in the season to do the job.
Bumble bees have to emerge as queens out of their winter hibernation and start forming a colony; till this happens and numbers increase not many beans set. Later on the plants produce well.
Another thing that you can do to encourage any native bees or bumble bees to pollinate the broad beans is to spray them with sugar and water.
Dissolve a couple of tablespoons of raw sugar into a litre of warm water and spray the plants. The same can be applied to any fruiting plant or tree that requires pollination.
Why raw sugar? Because it is natural and more appealing to the insects; it is also far better for you to take than white, refined sugar.
A lot of us will be germinating and growing seedlings for pots and gardens and every time we transplant, the young plants suffer.
This can be simply overcome by spraying the plants a couple of days beforehand with Vaporgard which greatly reduces transplant shock and is ideal to spray onto foliage you are going to cut for cuttings. (For cuttings dip the end in a bit of honey or spit on them, either helps)
If planting out in a windy area or near the sea you can give the plants a far better start by spraying them with the Vaporgard.
Increase the yield, size of the fruit and flavour, of strawberries by spraying them every 2 weeks with Mycorrcin. Trials showed an increase of up to 400% and that is a fact.
For extra big strawberries you may like to try my ‘Wally’s Secret Strawberry Food’. Strawberries bigger than apricots are possible.
For best overall results in the garden apply sheep manure pellets or Bio Boost (both are good) instead of any chemical fertilisers. Spray the preferred plants (roses etc) and vegetables with Magic Botanic Liquid (MBL) every two weeks. Spray the soil around the plants at the same time.
Gardeners that have been using this natural spray have reported that they have never had such great gardens and crops before.
MBL makes a really big difference to the health of the plants and soil and you will be impressed.
Many gardeners will be spraying with copper sprays at this time and here is a big one, DO NOT mix any spraying oils with the copper. Sure you have been told in the past to mix the two together and many do so through force of habit.
The fact is the oil greatly reduces the effectiveness of the copper and helps wash the copper particles off faster in rain when compared to not having the oil.
Then ask yourself why is the oil used? The simple answer is, it is used to smoother scale or thrip insects. If you have no scale or thrips present, why waste your money?
If the pests appear at anytime you can use an oil to control them.
Liquid Coppers are more user-friendly than powdered ones as they do not block your jets like the powders do.
Soon aphids will appear on the new shoots of roses and other plants; if you have any of those old yellow cakes of Sunlight soap, simply lather some up in warm water and spray the aphids. It’s best done when the sun is off the plants, later in the day. The fatty acids from the soap break down the aphid’s bodies.
If you do not have any of those yellow cakes then use Wallys Super Neem Tree Oil with Wallys Super Pyrethrum added.
Whitefly on tomatoes is a great problem for many gardeners and by simply placing some Neem Tree Granules around near the base of the plants will help prevent their populations from building up without the need to spray much, if at all.
The granules need to be repeated about every 6-8 weeks.
If you have worms in your lawn causing worm casts that you do not like, then dissolve some Cold Water Surf in water and throw that over the lawn.
The worms will come to the surface where you should then pick them up and bury these valuable creatures back into your gardens.
Someone told me recently that it will also bring grassgrubs to the surface where the birds will eat them. I’m not sure if this is correct or not but it’s worth a shot. Do it early in the morning as that is when the sparrows etc. look for breakfast.
Here is an interesting thing I have just learnt; allow avocado stones to dry for a couple days on windowsill then carefully chop up or grate into small bits. Soak these bits in rubbing alcohol or Vodka for a day or so. Apply the liquid to any area that you have pain, sore back, knee wherever. It gives pain relief fairly quickly I am told.
You can also plant the stones somewhere suitable for a tree top grow, mark the place with a stake and likely you will be eating your own avocados in about 3 years time.
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