I just found you! Thanks for sharing, very informative. I like your style, right to it - no rambling. I'm a backyard grower with 8 blueberry plants. Right here in Central KY!! according to your info - - I might have voles...
@SimonHaestoe7 күн бұрын
"bluetypes dont like calcium" LOL. You should talk to AEA, they do science.
@sy7332612 күн бұрын
Any particular growing medium for starting seeds. Any suggestions where to get seeds? Do you have Scott Bayuk's contact information? Thank you.
@wasmara28 күн бұрын
Thank you so much!
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday13 күн бұрын
You're welcome!
@garygilliam1890Ай бұрын
I live in 7b how many of these can I grow in the ground
@higherpower_ict4457Ай бұрын
looking to start a green space project in Wichita KS with a local group of like minded individuals. This was very helpful. Thank you
@JessicaBlaze89Ай бұрын
I have wild black cap raspberry vines and blackberries ❤ 👉 Allen Co
@Momcat6Ай бұрын
So interesting, thanks for this! We're in central Illinois and are really enjoying this emergence. They are beautiful and some do appear much smaller than our annual types. Thank you for pointing out the differences in the calls. The "little" ticking cicada sounds to me like an automatic sprinkler! My husband can't hear them well and thinks I'm completely mad when I tell him there are different calls.
@lynndietz490Ай бұрын
Going to be trying to grow from seeds this yr.
@TheBestThingscom2 ай бұрын
Fantastic presentation!
@Chris-op7yt2 ай бұрын
dont know about control in various industries however, in my own backyard they are mostly gone, thanks to soil remediation and keeping plants healthy and growing. they were mainly in the lawn, which was not healthy, and provided the beetles with lots of dead and dying roots
@gangofgreenhorns26722 ай бұрын
Great info. Ducks leave holes in the ground similar to skunks too I've noticed while looking for worms and grubs.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday2 ай бұрын
That's cool. Thanks for watching.
@charlesmurschell31102 ай бұрын
I think that house belongs to the DeMeo farm
@greenweave38822 ай бұрын
This was an excellent video!! Thank you for sharing this, and spreading awareness!
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday2 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@threeriversforge19973 ай бұрын
Excellent talk! I've just planted a handful of Pen Sedge under my oak tree and it's doing quite well. I hope to add a few dozen more pots so I can develop a solid green carpet under the Pin Oak. That C.woodii looks very nice and could replace my entire front yard. While my local nurseries don't deal in Carex at all, I have found a place about an hour away that has a few of the basics and I hope that they'll be open to carrying more. A couple of C.haydenii will be added to the yard this year just so I can say I did it. After seeing it in a video on the Mt. Cuba Center, I was sold on having one or two, but only now have found a source for the beauties!
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday2 ай бұрын
So glad this was helpful. Thanks for sharing.
@piotrwojdelko11503 ай бұрын
I planted in Poland two varietes .Zimerman is well -known Do you know about cold resistance of Jaspis varietety ? It has a pink flesh.I live in zone 7
@VonFej613 ай бұрын
I must of watched over a dozen videos on black raspberry's , and this is the first one to address my concerns of fist year canes sprawling across the ground. Thank you, looking forward to picking my first few Mac Black it year.
@lydiaahubbell85452 ай бұрын
I would swear that my black raspberries send out runners.
@VonFej612 ай бұрын
@@lydiaahubbell8545 They do both, runners and tip rooting.
@grizenium3 ай бұрын
Can Paw Paw trees be grown in Hawaii?
@baotrinh30525 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot you really help me out. I don't have peat moss available around me may I use coconut coir for substitution? And what else can I use to replace wood chips? Once again thank you
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday5 ай бұрын
Coconut coir could be used as an alternative. It is not as acidic as peat so watch for pH issues. I've read coir doesn't work as well for clay soils but still worth a try on a small scale. I found one Extension resource on using coir that may be helpful: extension.oregonstate.edu/news/coir-sustainable-alternative-peat-moss-garden Wood chips being used as mulch - any organic material would work instead. Pine needles, sawdust, and leaf mold are all commonly used.
@baotrinh30525 ай бұрын
@@HorticultureWebinarWednesday thank you very much I really really appreciate your help
@johnbranconi90537 ай бұрын
Is it 100% certain, that if the fruit was frozen for a short while, the seeds would not be viable?
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday5 ай бұрын
Everything I can find on the subject says if the seeds freeze (for a just a moment or long period) the seed will not sprout. Same goes for dessication or drying out of the seed. I don't have any personal experience on this though.
@lunabeta35167 ай бұрын
Just now wanting to do a community garden thing. So far, this is the best video I've watched. Much appreciated
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday2 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@gradyconnor26367 ай бұрын
I want to grow them here in western North Carolina
@melissajones93347 ай бұрын
will the chokeberry bush/tree get tent worms?
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday7 ай бұрын
tent caterpillar is listed as a pest for this plant - but in 20 years I can't say I've ever had a call about this pest on this plant, so I'm not sure how common of a problem it actually is.
@strategicprepper26488 ай бұрын
Thanks. This video is very helpful. I have 5 trees, 3 varieties. Looking forward to when they produce.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday8 ай бұрын
Good luck!
@TheWisendorf9 ай бұрын
One year japaneese beetles ruined my rasberries or I thought. I just gave up rather than start using poison. Turned out that the beetle kinda ran there cycle and I was blessed with a great crop of very large berries.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Japanese Beetles are a pain! So glad you waited them out.
@TheWisendorf9 ай бұрын
Rabbits love berry bushes and will eat your bushes all the way down to the ground. So your primocanes are gone. So that is why I love the everbearing stuff because you get lots of berries every year no matter what the rabbits do.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Very good point.
@TheWisendorf9 ай бұрын
I grow caroline rasberries. They do great. If I planted some black rasberries are they going to get all crossed up and ruin my red rasberry patch???/
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
I checked with our fruit specialist and he says this won't be a problem.
@chrisstanford36529 ай бұрын
🐛🦋😮🤗
@somayaghaly8859 ай бұрын
U covered everything Excellent and thanks
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
So nice of you
@MilesSherry9 ай бұрын
Such a helpful tip that I hadn’t heard... If it blooms in Spring, divide it in Fall and vice versa. I’m in love with my Aromatic Asters. They’re budded up and should be blooming soon (zone 8A, Texas). Great video!
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for watching.
@wildangel61779 ай бұрын
Hello from Austria! Thank you so much for sharing this vlog! Pawpaw is our favorite fruit from our garden, we have 2 trees and planning to add 2 more trees!
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Thanks for visiting
@philipoulton77309 ай бұрын
Glyphosate? WTAF? KSU is well-known for their pawpaw cultivars, but you lost all credibility with me when you suggested Round-Up.... then Miracle Grow? What next Neonicotenoids? Krike!
@travismorgan92738 ай бұрын
Do you buy stuff at the grocery store that isn’t organic?
@shawnsgАй бұрын
Just because you've been told something is "evil" doesn't mean it is.
@TarpeianRock4 сағат бұрын
Chill out nature boy !
@TheGratefulGarden9 ай бұрын
Man I really really wish I could be apart of that research program!!!
@yaddahaysmarmalite40599 ай бұрын
So glad y'all are researching pawpaws.
@thehillsidegardener396110 ай бұрын
Good stuff, I live in Southern Europe, obviously NOT their natural range but a very few people are growing them and selling seedlings (not named varieties as far as I know). One guy sent me some seedlings, plus a fruit he had grown, first time I'd tried it, it's not like they can be flown over! Planted a few seeds and one survived, the seedlings I bought I planted basically in the full shade of some apple trees which I hope they will outgrow and outlive. They seem to have done ok so far in our hot summers, although two seedlings died right back last summer in the heat, only to resprout this year! I've got high hopes, I'm always trying to grow interesting non-native things, I get bored of cherries, plums and apples!
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching. Good luck with your trees.
@TarpeianRock10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this very complete pawpaw overview. Growing them in Belgium btw.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Our pleasure! Best of luck.
@tulsiramdagur958010 ай бұрын
Hello friends how are you.
@janpodgornik35310 ай бұрын
Thanks for uploading this. Regards from Slovenia.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@murglo1marais10 ай бұрын
How to grow castard apple
@willavantonder659011 ай бұрын
Can someone help us here in south africa to find seedlings or seed of this type of pawpaw
@pauldodson201811 ай бұрын
Dear Director of Research Sherri Crabtree, I cannot find any reference to when one will see the fruit on paw paws emerge. I did find a huge patch but as of now (August 15th) NO paw paws! I would assume that I would see some by now......... yes? Thank you.-Paul
@j.b.434011 ай бұрын
Great chat.
@SimpleTanks11 ай бұрын
This is fanatic thank you.
@annharlan892611 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for all this great info. I'm in NC 7b/8a (outside Charlotte) and on my third time planting blueberries. They hate our clay soil (literally a 7.0) even with a few inches of well composted wood chips/compost on top that I've worked for several years to improve. It still sits on a clay pan. This year I put them in pots. I'm going to eventually need to get them in the ground but from this info I'm clearly going to need to build some significant raised beds and work to get them significantly lower acid. I've got my work cut out for me. Also, I don't think they like our heat. With global warming - we used to have some ice and snow storms in January/February but not anymore. Might be a lost cause but I'm giving it another try. This year (2023) we have had a tremendous amount of rain (usually dry summers) and so much has just rotted. Glad my blueberries are in pots also put them in partial shade later in day. Here's hoping.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday9 ай бұрын
Best of luck.
@thomasashe2681 Жыл бұрын
How well would they grow in a 5 gallon bucket?
@777dragonborn Жыл бұрын
We used to call them Hillbilly bananas . because the only place pawpaw's grew were was in the mountains .
@kingjames4886 Жыл бұрын
interesting fruit. too cold for them here :/
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching anyway.
@dougforsyth7457 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the information, very well organized and presented. I did not know much about yellow swallowtail biology before watching your video.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@gobbism Жыл бұрын
Comprehensive! Of course! I do wish that someone would redo the native range map because my research indicates that they used to be common in some highly industrialized areas in the past, including the Allegheny River valley in western Pennsylvania.
@HorticultureWebinarWednesday Жыл бұрын
I'll pass your comment on to the speaker. She might like to know that info. Thank you.
Пікірлер
I just found you! Thanks for sharing, very informative. I like your style, right to it - no rambling. I'm a backyard grower with 8 blueberry plants. Right here in Central KY!! according to your info - - I might have voles...
"bluetypes dont like calcium" LOL. You should talk to AEA, they do science.
Any particular growing medium for starting seeds. Any suggestions where to get seeds? Do you have Scott Bayuk's contact information? Thank you.
Thank you so much!
You're welcome!
I live in 7b how many of these can I grow in the ground
looking to start a green space project in Wichita KS with a local group of like minded individuals. This was very helpful. Thank you
I have wild black cap raspberry vines and blackberries ❤ 👉 Allen Co
So interesting, thanks for this! We're in central Illinois and are really enjoying this emergence. They are beautiful and some do appear much smaller than our annual types. Thank you for pointing out the differences in the calls. The "little" ticking cicada sounds to me like an automatic sprinkler! My husband can't hear them well and thinks I'm completely mad when I tell him there are different calls.
Going to be trying to grow from seeds this yr.
Fantastic presentation!
dont know about control in various industries however, in my own backyard they are mostly gone, thanks to soil remediation and keeping plants healthy and growing. they were mainly in the lawn, which was not healthy, and provided the beetles with lots of dead and dying roots
Great info. Ducks leave holes in the ground similar to skunks too I've noticed while looking for worms and grubs.
That's cool. Thanks for watching.
I think that house belongs to the DeMeo farm
This was an excellent video!! Thank you for sharing this, and spreading awareness!
Glad it was helpful!
Excellent talk! I've just planted a handful of Pen Sedge under my oak tree and it's doing quite well. I hope to add a few dozen more pots so I can develop a solid green carpet under the Pin Oak. That C.woodii looks very nice and could replace my entire front yard. While my local nurseries don't deal in Carex at all, I have found a place about an hour away that has a few of the basics and I hope that they'll be open to carrying more. A couple of C.haydenii will be added to the yard this year just so I can say I did it. After seeing it in a video on the Mt. Cuba Center, I was sold on having one or two, but only now have found a source for the beauties!
So glad this was helpful. Thanks for sharing.
I planted in Poland two varietes .Zimerman is well -known Do you know about cold resistance of Jaspis varietety ? It has a pink flesh.I live in zone 7
I must of watched over a dozen videos on black raspberry's , and this is the first one to address my concerns of fist year canes sprawling across the ground. Thank you, looking forward to picking my first few Mac Black it year.
I would swear that my black raspberries send out runners.
@@lydiaahubbell8545 They do both, runners and tip rooting.
Can Paw Paw trees be grown in Hawaii?
Thanks a lot you really help me out. I don't have peat moss available around me may I use coconut coir for substitution? And what else can I use to replace wood chips? Once again thank you
Coconut coir could be used as an alternative. It is not as acidic as peat so watch for pH issues. I've read coir doesn't work as well for clay soils but still worth a try on a small scale. I found one Extension resource on using coir that may be helpful: extension.oregonstate.edu/news/coir-sustainable-alternative-peat-moss-garden Wood chips being used as mulch - any organic material would work instead. Pine needles, sawdust, and leaf mold are all commonly used.
@@HorticultureWebinarWednesday thank you very much I really really appreciate your help
Is it 100% certain, that if the fruit was frozen for a short while, the seeds would not be viable?
Everything I can find on the subject says if the seeds freeze (for a just a moment or long period) the seed will not sprout. Same goes for dessication or drying out of the seed. I don't have any personal experience on this though.
Just now wanting to do a community garden thing. So far, this is the best video I've watched. Much appreciated
Thank you.
I want to grow them here in western North Carolina
will the chokeberry bush/tree get tent worms?
tent caterpillar is listed as a pest for this plant - but in 20 years I can't say I've ever had a call about this pest on this plant, so I'm not sure how common of a problem it actually is.
Thanks. This video is very helpful. I have 5 trees, 3 varieties. Looking forward to when they produce.
Good luck!
One year japaneese beetles ruined my rasberries or I thought. I just gave up rather than start using poison. Turned out that the beetle kinda ran there cycle and I was blessed with a great crop of very large berries.
Japanese Beetles are a pain! So glad you waited them out.
Rabbits love berry bushes and will eat your bushes all the way down to the ground. So your primocanes are gone. So that is why I love the everbearing stuff because you get lots of berries every year no matter what the rabbits do.
Very good point.
I grow caroline rasberries. They do great. If I planted some black rasberries are they going to get all crossed up and ruin my red rasberry patch???/
I checked with our fruit specialist and he says this won't be a problem.
🐛🦋😮🤗
U covered everything Excellent and thanks
So nice of you
Such a helpful tip that I hadn’t heard... If it blooms in Spring, divide it in Fall and vice versa. I’m in love with my Aromatic Asters. They’re budded up and should be blooming soon (zone 8A, Texas). Great video!
Thank you so much for watching.
Hello from Austria! Thank you so much for sharing this vlog! Pawpaw is our favorite fruit from our garden, we have 2 trees and planning to add 2 more trees!
Thanks for visiting
Glyphosate? WTAF? KSU is well-known for their pawpaw cultivars, but you lost all credibility with me when you suggested Round-Up.... then Miracle Grow? What next Neonicotenoids? Krike!
Do you buy stuff at the grocery store that isn’t organic?
Just because you've been told something is "evil" doesn't mean it is.
Chill out nature boy !
Man I really really wish I could be apart of that research program!!!
So glad y'all are researching pawpaws.
Good stuff, I live in Southern Europe, obviously NOT their natural range but a very few people are growing them and selling seedlings (not named varieties as far as I know). One guy sent me some seedlings, plus a fruit he had grown, first time I'd tried it, it's not like they can be flown over! Planted a few seeds and one survived, the seedlings I bought I planted basically in the full shade of some apple trees which I hope they will outgrow and outlive. They seem to have done ok so far in our hot summers, although two seedlings died right back last summer in the heat, only to resprout this year! I've got high hopes, I'm always trying to grow interesting non-native things, I get bored of cherries, plums and apples!
Thanks for watching. Good luck with your trees.
Thank you for this very complete pawpaw overview. Growing them in Belgium btw.
Our pleasure! Best of luck.
Hello friends how are you.
Thanks for uploading this. Regards from Slovenia.
Our pleasure!
How to grow castard apple
Can someone help us here in south africa to find seedlings or seed of this type of pawpaw
Dear Director of Research Sherri Crabtree, I cannot find any reference to when one will see the fruit on paw paws emerge. I did find a huge patch but as of now (August 15th) NO paw paws! I would assume that I would see some by now......... yes? Thank you.-Paul
Great chat.
This is fanatic thank you.
Thank you so much for all this great info. I'm in NC 7b/8a (outside Charlotte) and on my third time planting blueberries. They hate our clay soil (literally a 7.0) even with a few inches of well composted wood chips/compost on top that I've worked for several years to improve. It still sits on a clay pan. This year I put them in pots. I'm going to eventually need to get them in the ground but from this info I'm clearly going to need to build some significant raised beds and work to get them significantly lower acid. I've got my work cut out for me. Also, I don't think they like our heat. With global warming - we used to have some ice and snow storms in January/February but not anymore. Might be a lost cause but I'm giving it another try. This year (2023) we have had a tremendous amount of rain (usually dry summers) and so much has just rotted. Glad my blueberries are in pots also put them in partial shade later in day. Here's hoping.
Best of luck.
How well would they grow in a 5 gallon bucket?
We used to call them Hillbilly bananas . because the only place pawpaw's grew were was in the mountains .
interesting fruit. too cold for them here :/
Thanks for watching anyway.
Thanks for the information, very well organized and presented. I did not know much about yellow swallowtail biology before watching your video.
Glad it was helpful!
Comprehensive! Of course! I do wish that someone would redo the native range map because my research indicates that they used to be common in some highly industrialized areas in the past, including the Allegheny River valley in western Pennsylvania.
I'll pass your comment on to the speaker. She might like to know that info. Thank you.
Super informative, thank you so much!
Glad it was helpful!