Anonymous wrote:Fig trees are super easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fig trees are super easy.
Mine dies every year and then grows like a bush.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fig trees are super easy.
Mine dies every year and then grows like a bush.
Mine too. And produces figs so late they never have time to ripen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tomatoes and zucchini - easy and worth it in my opinion.
I have had blueberry bushes for years and each year, I get maybe 17 blueberries in total. That does not really put a dent in our blueberry consumption.
My blueberry bush has never produced any fruit. The birds keep eating it all. It's been llke six years or something.
Same for the rasberry bush.
Blackberry bush fruit is too tart.
I'm the PP who also has fruit trees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is time consuming because I have a big garden, and it’s a passion so I don’t mind spending the time.
A long time ago when I was starting out a wise gardener advised me to focus on bang for the buck with fruits and vegetables. So I grow tomatoes, many kinds of pepper except bell peppers, many kinds of beans, okra, cucumbers and eggplant. I like the variety offered by seed catalogs and have figured out what works best for my yard. I also grow lots of herbs. I buy my dill and parsley because the swallotail caterpillars love the ones I plant.
For fruits I grow blueberries, currants and figs. I had raspberries and blackberries but they were too unruly for my small space so I gave them away. I don’t grow anything I need to spray.
I’m not sure I save any money since I do spend a fair amount on fertilizers, mulch and paying for labor. But it’s a very enjoyable pastime and we love having exotic produce all season for ourselves and to share.
Can you share which types you plant on those plants?
Anonymous wrote:What kind of fruit trees? We’re moving soon and have room for fruit trees. We’re looking for something low maintenance that will do well in this area.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be time consuming, but IMO, I like that I am eating fresh from my garden, and it tastes different. It's also a hobby, and my workout (I hate exercising).
We grow
lettuce
zuchinni
tomatos
strawberries
peppers
sugar snaps
cucumber
We tried carrots, but they tasted a bit odd to me. Maybe too used to grocery ones. One year we grew a pumpkin and made pumpkin pie with it
You might want to move this to the gardening forum.
and we have two fruit trees that bear a fair amount of fruit. I love my fruit trees.
I live in a regular suburban subdivision, but we do have a privacy fence to try to keep the deer and rabbits out. I can't keep the squirrels out no matter how hard I try. If someone can find a way to do that, you would make a fortune.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fig trees are super easy.
Mine dies every year and then grows like a bush.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fig trees are super easy.
Mine dies every year and then grows like a bush.
Anonymous wrote:What kind of fruit trees? We’re moving soon and have room for fruit trees. We’re looking for something low maintenance that will do well in this area.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be time consuming, but IMO, I like that I am eating fresh from my garden, and it tastes different. It's also a hobby, and my workout (I hate exercising).
We grow
lettuce
zuchinni
tomatos
strawberries
peppers
sugar snaps
cucumber
We tried carrots, but they tasted a bit odd to me. Maybe too used to grocery ones. One year we grew a pumpkin and made pumpkin pie with it
You might want to move this to the gardening forum.
and we have two fruit trees that bear a fair amount of fruit. I love my fruit trees.
I live in a regular suburban subdivision, but we do have a privacy fence to try to keep the deer and rabbits out. I can't keep the squirrels out no matter how hard I try. If someone can find a way to do that, you would make a fortune.
Anonymous wrote:It is time consuming because I have a big garden, and it’s a passion so I don’t mind spending the time.
A long time ago when I was starting out a wise gardener advised me to focus on bang for the buck with fruits and vegetables. So I grow tomatoes, many kinds of pepper except bell peppers, many kinds of beans, okra, cucumbers and eggplant. I like the variety offered by seed catalogs and have figured out what works best for my yard. I also grow lots of herbs. I buy my dill and parsley because the swallotail caterpillars love the ones I plant.
For fruits I grow blueberries, currants and figs. I had raspberries and blackberries but they were too unruly for my small space so I gave them away. I don’t grow anything I need to spray.
I’m not sure I save any money since I do spend a fair amount on fertilizers, mulch and paying for labor. But it’s a very enjoyable pastime and we love having exotic produce all season for ourselves and to share.