| Fertilizing and Watering 
 
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          | Subject:  Vine burying 
 
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          | From | Location | Message | Date Posted | 
		
            | scott_kim_west_nc | Hampstead, NC 28443 | I have noticed many growers create a mixture of dirt, compost, fertilizer, mycro, etc... to use to bury their vines with.What is your mixture?
 What percentage of each?
 Thanks for your input.
 | 4/20/2012 10:10:21 AM | 
		
            | Pumpking | Germany | Last year I used just the dirt of the patch (haven´t used any myco with my plants so far, and the fertilizers were either broadcast or dissolved in water). This year I´m inclined to try myco (both at the plant site and at the leaf nodes...half a spoon at each leaf node). The tap roots of each leaf node will grow quite alot, and therefore, IMHO, it is probably much more important to have a good patch soil throughout rather than trying to enhance fertilizer concentration in the very small area where you bury the vines. | 4/20/2012 10:22:21 AM | 
		
            | Iowegian | Anamosa, IA  [email protected] | Scott, I make a mix of Jobes Organics, Espoma Starter Plus and Mykos that I add to the trench below each root node and scratch it in with my pointed hoe. This year I used a bag of each (6#, 4# and 2#). Sometimes I add a little bit of worm castings as well. When I run out of this mix, the root nodes farther out get just the Jobes and Espoma without the Mykos. Then I bury with garden soil. Since the roots go down and not up, I like to get my micorhizae and beneficial bacteria mixed into the soil where the roots will be growing. I apply my manure, compost and other fertilizers to the entire patch.  I also dig a big hole for each main root site so it has good loose soil and plenty of nutrients as well as my "mix" to get it off to a good start. I can get away with that due to my silt loam soil; it woudn't be a good idea in clay.  I view the soil covering as just material to hold the vines down so the wind doesn't whip them around and to hide them from vine borers. | 4/20/2012 5:00:45 PM | 
		
            | Iowegian | Anamosa, IA  [email protected] | One item I forgot. I don't mix the worm casting together with the other products. One time I mixed them all together and after a few days it started growing a white mold that made me nervous.  They get applied to the soil separately. | 4/20/2012 5:03:15 PM | 
		
            | Iowegian | Anamosa, IA  [email protected] | One item I forgot. I don't mix the worm casting together with the other products. One time I mixed them all together and after a few days it started growing a white mold that made me nervous.  They get applied to the soil separately. | 4/20/2012 5:03:15 PM | 
		
            | dguyh | Quincy, CA | I believe the Brysons use a mixture of compost and black dirt for vine burying.Hard to argue with their results.
 | 4/21/2012 1:16:22 AM | 
		
            | pburdon (Team Lunatic) | Goodwood, Ontario, Canada | The Bryson's buried their vines in horse manure.  Aged of course.  My plan is to disturb the soil under the vine as little as possible, as I've planted a cover crop to established a mycroriza relationship.  Just a little soil and horse manure mix over the nodes for me. | 4/21/2012 8:10:31 AM | 
		
        
          | Total Posts: 7 | Current Server Time: 10/31/2025 2:40:32 AM |