Jump to content

mkellerm

Members
  • Posts

    15
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by mkellerm

  1. 3 minutes ago, KAOS said:

    Snow.. already accumulating. It's a little grappley for the moment... though I expect that to change into white smoke.

     

    Definitely graupel in Annapolis as well - looks like little pebbles on the top of the car.

    • Like 1
  2. Someone set up a website to scrape pharmacy websites for appointments in (more or less) real time.  It also has a nice map showing availability across the state:

    COVID-19 Vaccine Spotter

    Some of the pharmacies work better with it than others (it is very good for Walmart and Walgreens, less so for Safeway), but it can point you in the right direction (which in this case is the Eastern Shore).

     

    • Like 1
  3. On 3/27/2021 at 6:50 PM, WeatherShak said:

    Fearing I was too ambitious and planted too early after seeing possible over night lows next week.

    Spent the last two weeks pulling English ivy, roots and hand filling this little plot. Laid some top soil today and mixed it in.

    Can we cover these up and be safe if we get overnight lows in the 30s?

    .

    If those are tomatoes and peppers I would definitely cover them at night when it is expected to get below 40 - they don't like getting cold.  If it is going to get closer to 32, you might think about putting some warm water in old milk jugs or something similar and putting the jugs near the plants under the cover at night.  If it is sunny/warm during the day you can leave the jugs out there when you take the cover off in the morning and let them heat up so they'll be ready to go in the evening again.

    The good news is that if the peppers make it, some time in cool weather should make the plants more productive when it warms up.  Don't think that works for tomatoes though.

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 2
  4. 3 hours ago, nj2va said:

    This seems to jive with some of the solutions I’ve read online, too.  When I was last at the property, the landscaper pointed out where some of the rhizomes could be seen shooting out from the main area.  Do you think I could take an axe to them to cut it off as a mitigation, too?

    I would definitely do that, and any time you get a clean exposed cut, hit the rhizome with roundup as well.  At our place, when there was an exposed section of rhizome above the ground, we'd cut out a section and roundup both sides.

    The other thing about this strategy is that the dead stumps and rhizomes take a long time to decay.  I tweaked my ankle more than once working on the hill when I stepped on one of those stumps without looking.

    • Thanks 1
  5. 11 hours ago, nj2va said:

    Thanks, I think I may just do that in the meantime to see how I do considering I can’t get on the landscapers schedule until July given the spring rush underway.  I get the privacy it provides but I really don’t understand the desire to plant bamboo considering how invasive it is.

    We had bamboo at our old house, which had spread along a steep slope from neighbors two doors down.  The slope was steep enough that we couldn't use machinery to dig out the rhizomes.  What worked for us was to cut down the stalks at the base, then brush full-strength roundup on the stump with a paintbrush.  Then, every time it sent up a new stalk, we waited for it to get to full height in order to use up as much of the stored food in the rhizomes as possible, then cut it right before the leaves opened and repeated the roundup treatment.  We couldn't eradicate it because a lot of it was not on our property, but we were able to hold it back effectively.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
×
×
  • Create New...