Looks like a good source of things. Online is obviously a growing option.
Maybe I miss Judged LIDL for selling frost protectors so early.
A week or so ago Menards had âbountyâ peachesâŚ$35. Too much and reading Olpeaâs review its a turd of a variety so i skipped buying anything.
Glad someone realized. That discussion should have been in the lounge.
I cleaned things upâŚ
I stopped at an out of town Costco today and was surprise to see some nice looking fruit trees in large pots for $45 each. The tags had variety name AND rootstock, and the descriptions pointed out that the peaches and nectarines are susceptible to leaf curl (the next best thing to just selling suitable varieties).
I went to tractor supply for the first time and saw the worse collection of trees ever. 1 year whips kept inside in bags. Overall all of the Big box stores are selling the most boring cultivars possible, Red and Golden delicious, Cortland. Contender peaches and Bartlett pears. I do kind of think its strategic this year. If they are going to offer 1 year replacement guarantees in a year that might see a lot of trees damaged by Cicadas why sell anything that might be costly to replace.
This is a misunderstanding. The post in question received two flags from members. As an admin, I was under the impression that it was hidden completely from members. The other admins were also under that impression.
We did not know the membership had an option of viewing the post. This is because admins can see any hidden post, or deleted post. So from an admin perspective, it looked the same as any other deleted post.
It was only until your post, which you showed it could still be viewed, that indicated the post could still be viewed by anybody. I logged in as in a non-admin account to see if I could see the post. Indeed I was able to see it and therefore deleted the post.
It wasnât anything âtellingâ that admins left the post. There is a person of Asian decent on the admin team. Scott Smithâs wife (the owner of the forum) is of Asian decent. It was simply a matter that we thought the post had been completely hidden.
I have deleted your post as well. Along with a reply to your post, since that reply would no longer have reference to your post.
The small one on the lower right is no better than used strawberry boxes which I employ to start seeds. If you use the cover and a heat pad below it assures warm enough medium to germinate heat loving seeds like peppers.
Yeah, visited 2 âtractor supplyâ stores briefly last week. Left both without making a purchase.
their fruit offerings were the worst ever spotted at that chain before.
Walked by the Walmart trees today on my way to the wheelbarrows. Just had a look at the nectarines⌠most were quite dead. A couple of peaches were trimmed to a 6 foot whip and also one tree that just said âPearâ. Didnât even look like there were any viable nodesâŚ
Thatâs what they had here, about what varieties they always have. Not terrible in a way- my mom wanted Prairiefire Crabapple for something over by the neighborâs kids. I got a Cortland to use as a multigraft tree. Both were way too branched, way too low- but fine for my use this year. Next year those scion get cut off and used. I have to do something with the roots though- who knows what it is, circled and rootbound.
Local Kroger here in Mi has a bunch of fruit trees out this week. Gala apples, Honeycrisp apples, Anjou Pears⌠and Persimmon.
Just persimmon, no name, no clarifying description.
The tag gave a nursery, so I went to the website. The site has wonderful descriptions of their varieties⌠all except, you guessed it, the persimmon.
I looked and since I didnât notice a graft mark that it is just a seed grown random American persimmonâŚ
Cheap, but goodness only knows what it may one day produce. (they had half a dozen of these and they will likely end up marked down in time because I canât imagine they will sell⌠2 days later all that remained (besides the persimmons) was a Moorpark and a sickly looking Gala apple.
Scott
and they have the + 30f hardy stuff up here in z 3b! idiots!
There are multiple people at fault here. First off, the store employees generally know nothing about plants, but thatâs the fault of the stores who hired them.
Secondly, the issue mentioned above which is that often times these decisions are made at a corporate level, instead of at a level suitable to the climate of the area.
Some of the local big box stores here failed to protect tomatoes and peppers from the freeze, so now they have hundreds or thousands of dollars worth of dead plants.
The reason? The vendors get paid only for plants that are soldâŚnot the ones going to the trash dump!
Same here, you canât even find anything below Z5.
its crazy!