Honestly, you didn't miss much. I haven't bought any new air cleaning plants since my last post on the subject (sadly, the Areca Palm and the Gerbera Daisy both met their maker, but the others are doing quite well), Just when I thought my fungus gnat problem was gone at home and work, suddenly there was a whole new infestation--and this time Gnatrol didn't help (Unlike last time, the Amazon seller I bought it from this time gave it to me in a plastic baggie, and I have a sneaking suspicion that they're using an old batch. To their credit they agreed to refund my money, no questions asked--but watering the plant with an impotent tablespoon of Gnatrol just made the problem worse.
Ah, now to the strawberries. Here, you didn't miss much either. Since the last post, there was only one strawberry--one--that survived.
Now as you recall, one of my "dreams" was to grow enough indoor strawberries to make my own shortcake. Well, I have the "short" down right anyway. As in, I'm short of the number I wanted.
But it's been a learning experience. I pretty conclusively figured out that everything I said last November was on the mark, except perhaps for the temperature one. Specifically...
1) I'm not watering enough. Far and away, this is my #1 problem. I have gigantic, huge green leaves which are soaking up the light--and soaking up the water. I mean literally, I might go two days and find the reservoir almost completely dry. And what looked like a beautiful white flower a few days ago is just a dried up little stump, because the strawberry didn't have enough water to grow. So now, I literally am watering every single day.
2) I'm letting dead leaves overstay their welcome. I noticed a phenomenon where older leaves would turn brown. Turns out this is perfectly normal, and the best thing to do is the prune the leaves by cutting the stem near the root. This prevents the dying leaf from hogging up the resources, and gives a chance for new growth. Similarly, I've noticed that some of the crowns produce fewer and fewer leaves and then just stop growing. I've taken those out to make more room for the healthy ones.
3) I'm not pollinating enough. Aerogrow's instructions are to give the plants a "good shake" to pollinate them, but I've seen to many instances where the flowers give way to scrunched up, misformed fruits. I decided to make like a bee, take a Q-Tip, and go from flower to flower. That's helped a lot.
4) I'm not feeding right. Admittedly, I've let the unit go without a proper feeding for too long from time to time. Being fastidious about feeding is critical for plants staying healthy.
5) Those *%%^@#& fungus gnats. I find that they've gotten into the Aerogarden too. The good news is, the ones that have matured freak out every hour the upper basin start filling with water, and so I can vacuum them up with my Dyson handheld. I put a yellow trap that seems to catch them too. I'm not sure how many of the larvae can survive the continual cycle of watering and drying, but so far the plants seem to be winning.
Well, lo and behold, just doing these things a little more carefully has resulted in a sudden influx of flowers. In this picture you can see all the stages that happen when strawberry plants grow--you start with a white and yellow flower, then the white petals start to fall off and the middle yellow part (the stamen) starts to bulge and look like a tiny green strawberry. If all goes well, in a few days it'll get bigger and bigger, and finally start turning pink and then red.
This is a strawberry that looks like it wasn't pollinated quite right...you can see it all scrunched up and not ripening as quickly as its high-achieving sibling.
On the other hand, this is one that I deliberately and carefully hand-pollinated from the time it was just a small flower.
Again, here you can see some of its siblings, one still in flower form, while the other a tiny berry already.
So, the time came to harvest my second successful Aerogarden strawberry. Here's what it looked like inside, again pretty much a perfect strawberry.
My only regret is that in three months, I only have two strawberries to show for it. So my dream of building a victory garden that would sustain me in my apartment if I were to be snowed in or Y2K were to hit...that'll still have to wait. But at the very least, here's hoping that all those flowers you see in the picture above will yield at least enough for me to make a strawberry shortcake cupcake :)
5 comments:
Are you planning on getting the new Aerogarden Bounty?
How're the strawberries? What about the gnats??
Sorry, just getting around to approving a lot of old comments!
I ended up getting a few more strawberries, but not a huge harvest. The way that the Coco Chunks is left exposed to the air in the Aerogarden tray was like an open invitation for gnats to come party, so I had to get rid of them, unfortunately.
The good news is that the gnats are completely gone--it looks like the open-air Aerogarden was ground zero for the gnats, so once that was gone it was pretty simply clearing the stragglers who laid eggs in my other plants.
I'm hoping to get an Aerogarden Bounty at some point--I've never tried a garden with LED lights, so looking forward to seeing how well that works.
Thanks!
Steve
Hi,
I have experience with both the Ultra LED model and the Bounty LED model. The LED light hood is amazing. I haven't tested the light hood to its full five-year limit but there's no bulb changing and the plants grow like weeds under the lights. I was, unfortunately, throwing basil away because of the saturation of it. Especially Genovese Basil.
Essentially, it's the same as the Ultra LED. Same size and capacity. It just has a touchscreen control panel and nine holes for seed pods with a slightly different design for the light hood. It does keep better track of everything compared with the Ultra LED.
I hope this helps. Have a fantastic day. :)
Post a Comment