Heading into week 5 here. Overall things looking good: 1 Chinook Haze ended up with a partly broken stem because I had a few plants sitting in a fairly exposed spot and the breeze picked up. Hopefully it'll recover--I brought it inside and will baby it for a week, packed some additional soil around the stem (broken part is buried now). Will keep it indoors for a week and see if it can heal up.
Only other issue is that one of the Cherry Wines was showing the "taco" shaped leaves yesterday afternoon. It was fairly warm, though not really all that hot. Is tacoing a sign of the plant trying to cool itself off? I gave her a little water in the afternoon but the leaves still looked curled at dusk. Plus looks a little "crinkly." What do you think this is? Here's the plant after I brought her in for the night, just before turning the lights off last night. It's about 63 degrees in the shed.
Here's the whole gang. I know my light setup here is pretty ghetto, but it's just for a couple hours in the evenings, they spend the day outside at this point.
Got my soil test results back for the area where all the Cherry Wines are going in the ground, not too bad at all. pH was 6, much higher than where last year's garden was (4.9!). I'll add a small amount of lime and a few other amendments to each planting hole but I should be able to use mainly native soil with some composted cow manure mixed in.
I need to rig up a way to pump water from the brook for irrigation. Anybody have any recommended gear? Not close enough to run power from the house--a solar-powered pump would be pretty slick, but if I have to run a gasoline motor pump or generator I will. Certainly not going to be carry 5g buckets from the brook like last year, not with this many more plants!
Been fairly dry so far this spring, planning on a hot dry summer again but maybe we'll get more rain.
Brown-tail moth caterpillars are just showing up now--total nightmare (we're in year 4 of a bad infestation here in the midcoast). They didn't touch any of my cannabis plants last year but they'll strip an entire Red Oak in a matter of weeks. Just devastating. Thought about trying to spray some of the canopies in Bt but no way to get a spray that high up (50-80 feet) without destroying the bacteria with a high-velocity nozzle. Going to try banding the tree trunks with aluminum tape or possibly some special "goop"--maybe that will keep the caterpillars from climbing back up into the trees and stripping them bare.
Oh, and did I mention the ticks? They've been endemic here for some time, but this spring has been by far the worst ever. I'm pulling the bastards off me pretty much all day and whereas normally I might get 1 or 2 embedded in a season, so far this year I've probably had a dozen. Really bad. I swear I must have Lyme resistance built up from exposure over the years because I would surely have Lyme disease by now.
Hope everyone's doing well. Let's see updates.