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some how you can never have enough

2007-02-04 06:01:43 · 6 answers · asked by caveman 2 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

6 answers

Depends on whats grown

Peas need 2" spacing , Indeterminate tomatoes need 3 ft spacing less # of plants per ft

2007-02-04 06:12:55 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I am from Texas and Florida and use to being able to grow things all the time, and no you can never have enough. Right now I am in a RV outside New Orleans trying to help with the rebuilding and freezing my rear off. I hate the weather here and I wanna go back to Florida, but theres way to much work here in the swamp land. I just hope that I don't die here with the alligators and snakes. I wanna grow my tropicals again. Living in a RV and cramped for space. I do have plants outside and eagerly awaiting warm weather so that I can at least grow my tomatos in 5 gallon buckets. Here's a heads up for growing tomatos. I prepare a 5 gallon bucket of soil, find a really great tasting tomato and squeeze the seeds out onto the soil. keep dry for two weeks, hit with fertilizer, wait until plants are strong enough to transplant. You will have more tomatos than you can use all season. I do mine in stages, therefore I always have tomatos, say two weeks apart. I can them and make salsa and spagetti sauce, I share with my neighbors to. I use this methods on other vegetables as well. Bell peppers, grape tomatoes, any thing with a seed. This year I'm gonna try a cucumber and see if that works.

2007-02-04 14:25:05 · answer #2 · answered by Cheryl 6 · 0 0

One can grow as many (different) and as many (quantity) just about anywhere as the growing's limit is $$$$$$$$. One can grow hundred of thousands of tropical species in the most harsh of deserts if one has enough $$$$ to build what would be required. Were I inclined and you furnished the $$$$, I could grow a million plants on one square meter of earth surface of my backyard, at one time.

2007-02-04 14:21:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

In a subdivision there are specifications regarding lot size. For example, 60 percent of the land must be in lawn, 40 percent MAX in plants and shrubs. There are even master planned communities that tell you how many and what type of trees should be grown on your property.....

2007-02-04 15:30:35 · answer #4 · answered by Patricia D 6 · 1 0

i wish i could cause the limiting factor is money/cash/$$$$$!!
and if i have that $$$$$, i'll buy land big enough to plant every that come to mind!

2007-02-08 03:57:13 · answer #5 · answered by mombok 2 · 0 0

i can never have enough... i have been threatening to turn the lawn into a garden.

this idea has not been well received... lol

2007-02-06 21:56:26 · answer #6 · answered by Curlee 2 · 0 0

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