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submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Hello friends!

One of our admins, @poVoq, has set up a wiki in his spare time for slrpnk.net. For the time being, editing is limited to moderators-only. However, @poVoq has also created an EtherPad that we can use to work together on it!

I went ahead and started a /c/BalconyGardening wiki but we need your ideas, knowledge, and experience to make it a helpful addition to the community. So, I am proposing that we use an Etherpad with the name BalconyWiki to collaborate on additions and improvements to the wiki. I'd ask that you please add your Lemmy username at the top-right of etherpad when editing to keep it accountable. :)

Any and all suggestions are welcome, as long as they fit within the BalconyGardening theme. I would love it if we could set up a starting guide for those who want to set up their first balcony garden!

Here are some ideas of sections we can develop:

  • Getting Started - for those new to balcony gardening
  • No Balcony? No Problem! - other ways community members can garden
  • Common Issues - and solutions!
  • Recommended Crops - to offset food costs, to resist pests, for high-yield to share with others, etc.
  • DIY/Upcycled Solutions - such as re-using plastic waste for planters

I hope you're all enjoying your day and I can't wait to hear your ideas!

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submitted 5 days ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Zone 8b

Varieties: Russian blue, white

Grown in potato planting bags for good drainage. They are in the process of flowering, and some have produced a fruit (very poisonous - do not eat it). Hoping for lots of potatoes this year 🙂

The floppy plants to the left are garlic (soft and hardneck Italian). They are fine; they got too tall and fell over.

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submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 2 weeks ago by SoySaucePrinterInk to c/[email protected]

Alt: Photo of young green cherry tomatoes on a tomato plant on a balcony. The photo mostly shows green tomato plant foliage. There are some yellow tomato flowers in the top left corner of the frame.

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submitted 3 weeks ago by SoySaucePrinterInk to c/[email protected]

I had filled a pot with seedlings, so the nursery pots I found at the side of the road came in handy today. I split them into their own pots which I will give away to friends and family once they grow larger.

My goal is to grow marigolds from seed for the first time to enjoy their summer blooms and repel pests from my veggies.

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submitted 4 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I got quite a large Bedroom Window that I like to keep open during the Night and I thought it would lend itself super nicely for some Strong and Nicely smelling aromatic plants just outside it, so that by proxy the room itself always has that lovely plant flavour.

The Window itself is on the Sunside and thusly is always flooded with Sun light. If possible, I'd also prefer something colourful so I got something lovely to look at as I wake up!

Any suggestions?

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Video Collection (slrpnk.net)
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I do not have a balcony, but I thought I would share the videos I have collected in the past just in case they ended up helping someone. I just joined, so I am not sure how/if they can be embeded, so I will just put links.

Also, here is a website that might help.

“If it is a South or West-facing balcony, you’ll have sunshine almost all day, which means you can grow anything. An East facing balcony receives sunlight in the morning, which is sufficient for most greens, herbs, and root vegetables. On the contrary, a North-facing balcony usually remains shady throughout the year, and it isn’t easy to grow vegetables in the shade. However, you can still try lettuce, parsley, peas, cilantro, fenugreek, green onions, bok choy, and mustard greens.” BalconyGardenWeb

The image used was also sourced from that website.

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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Here's my green balcony :)

I just started with hydroponics. Some of my plants are already in hydro, but most are still soil based.

I plan to convert future plants to hydro in the future, but right now, I wanna see how it goes.

Also, I will of course post an update in a few months, when the plants are bigger. Right now, they are all pretty young and some might not surive due to the transfer stress from soil to hydro.

What do I grow?

  • Weed (CBD, THC, autoflower and photoperiodic strains), some young ones in hydro, most in soil for now
  • Symbiotic plants, e.g. dill (mite repelling) or soy (nitrogen fixing)
  • Herbs (sage, parsley, basil, thai basil, etc.)
  • Strawberries
  • Cantaloupe
  • Berries
  • Chillies
  • Catnip
  • and more

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by SoySaucePrinterInk to c/[email protected]

They've been surprisingly easy. These Yukon gold potatoes grow fast!

Only 1 week ago:

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submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

My SO and I have been planning to start a mushroom garden for awhile now. You can buy these kits with mushroom spawn in peg form, and you just drill holes in a log and hammer them in. I'd had big dreams of going along the bike path, adding them to all the dead logs there, until I learned how important it is to properly and thoroughly inoculate freshly-cut logs in order to make sure your fungus of choice is properly established and safe from the competition. This was a bit of a problem as we live in an apartment and the circumstances where I'd cut down a healthy tree are seriously slim, and don't include providing food for mushrooms.

But one of the perks of having a big family is that one of them is always doing yard work, and when one of their birch trees bought it in a recent snowstorm, I was ready to jump in and claim a few pieces. They were happy to get rid of it; they feel grey birch burns poorly - and I was happy to take some because it supposedly turns beautifully on the lathe and it's a suitable medium for shiitake mushrooms.

As an aside, I prepped one thinner piece for use on the lathe. I clamped it to the table and used a draw knife (and a regular carving knife) to strip off the bark, before painting the ends with wax. This helps prevent cracking and checking due to uneven drying from the ends, and spalting/mold/rot from moisture under the bark. Assuming it does as well as the maple and oak I've done previously, it'll be ready to use in a year or two.

Okay, back on to the mushrooms! We bought our kit from a company called Northspore who provided pretty thorough guidance. Their instructions said that logs 4-6" thick and 3-4' long would be good, and one of ours fit that nicely. The instructions also said our log had been cut at about the worst time, after the buds on the branches had begun to swell. So... sorry, mushrooms! Hopefully you'll figure out how to make that work.

They provided a drill bit, instructions on how deep to drill (1") and where (in staggered rows, each hole 4" apart, 2" from their neighboring rows, so it makes diamond patterns). I grabbed a drill and measuring tape and set about drilling all the holes.

(I also cut a couple risers out of a dead log to keep the mushroom log off the ground)

Once all the holes were drilled, we started hammering in the pegs with a rubber mallet.

I don't have great photos of this step (it was a lot of fun) but here's one of the log after we got them all driven in.

The last step was to seal all the pegs in place with melted wax. The kit provided powdered wax and a little fuzzball on a wire handle for applying it. We set up a double boiler on a hotplate and melted the wax while we added the pegs.

We hid our mushroom log in a shady forested spot near the apartment fence. If all goes well, I'll be back with mushroom pictures sometime next year.

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by SoySaucePrinterInk to c/[email protected]

Like hole size, placement, etc?

This is what I have in mind. Let me know what you think!

Edit: it's a 215mm (8.5") pot that I will be planting letteuce in

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The article is available in both English and Vietnamese.

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submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I'm launching a little balcony gardening project that involves water reservoirs. I don't have much experience with these kinds of projects, so I need a little help.

Due to some dimensional constraints, I will need two regular plastic containers (your typical storage containers), and I was hoping to get away with only including a way to fill one of them. That means I will need to connect it to the other in some way. So I thought I would just drill a hole in both of them and stick a pipe between them.

  1. What is the best way to drill holes in plastic without risking any splitting?
  2. How do I make sure that the holes are water sealed afterwards? Can I glue around the pipe and plastic box?
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How to Get Your Apartment Off the Grid (solar.lowtechmagazine.com)
submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Although slightly off-topic, I decided to post this since it applies to balcony gardens and indoor small-scale gardens alike.

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submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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Growing a snack bar on the deck (live.staticflickr.com)
submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Does anyone have a good method for dealing with plant debris? I'm thinking about things like stems from plants, or even just pruned bits. I don't have a place to compost effectively. My normal method for woody debris is to cut it to little pieces with garden shears, and for leafy stuff to just let it dry out and crunch it up. After, I'll just stick it in the bottom of a pot that I'm going to put a new plant in. It gets a little broken down, but not as well as I'd like, and I can only do it when I have a new plant to pot, so I end up with a random pile of stuff that sits around for a while.

I wish I had like a tiny woodchipper or something.

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submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by SoySaucePrinterInk to c/[email protected]

I started in mid-November and have already had 5 harvests! The outrageous red and oak leaf letteuce have done the best. None of the black seeded Simpson survived. They're all leggy because of the distance to my grow lights but one of these days I'll get around to setting up a way to drop them down.

At this point, I'm getting about 1 cut and come again harvest per week from all 4 plants which is far more than I expected. Once the weather warms up, I'd like to chop them and start new seedlings for outside on the balcony. I have been averaging about 14-15kWh, or 2¢ per month in electricity costs.

https://pixelfed.de/p/SoySaucePrinterInk/667557572274690054

https://pixelfed.de/p/SoySaucePrinterInk/667557630245529612

https://pixelfed.de/p/SoySaucePrinterInk/667557686452770836

https://pixelfed.de/p/SoySaucePrinterInk/667557735601760281

https://pixelfed.de/p/SoySaucePrinterInk/667557797835868193

https://pixelfed.de/p/SoySaucePrinterInk/667557858406889514

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submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Some years ago, I was learning brussels sprouts and had a few extra starts. I gave most away, but one I planted in a pot for goofs. It stuck around for a few seasons, even surviving a bolt. So, it became Brusselfriend. Three years later it finally bolted and killed itself. A few of the seeds grew into new sprouts and this one survived the whole season. So, PoB is now headed into their second season. If it bolts this year, hopefully I can keep the line going

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submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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Balcony Gardening

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2 users here now

Welcome to c/BalconyGardening @ slrpnk.net!

A young community dedicated to balcony gardening.


About

Show off that vertical veggie garden 35 stories high. Or that bucket of potatoes you're proud of. Perhaps some fall mums that have been catching your eye through the sliding door into your living room. Any and all balcony gardens are welcome! Come and show your's off because we love to see it. :)

We also welcome ideas, tips, and items which have helped you in your balcony gardening journey. No balcony? Feel free to join in with your container garden with limited space too!



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