Bikerbabezzr, i dont feed my plants anything. I dont really believe in artificial fertilization. The only thing that i put in their is organic compost from my compost pile. I occasionally put some miracle grow vegetable feed in there, but thats only occasionally and not on any specific schedule.
@PineGroveBird Im sorry i havent made any videos lately, but ive been really busy lately. Ill try to get a video out soon. Right now there is about a foot of snow in my area, but the goji plant is holding up pretty well. The fence definitely protected it very well. This winter has been one of the worst in my area, we had some really bad snow storms, but the goji was protected by the fence pretty suffeciently. It developed a nice hard bark and it should sprout nicely in the spring.
I also am growing Goji plants. there are 4inc high now and at least 3months old i give them Vitax Organic Seaweed and i mix it in boiled cold water. In all of your videos on here you talk about your plants there height and there goodness but you have never said what you feed your Goji on and as i live in Ireland i would like to know before winter comes around so i can get them good and strong.
You've inspired me to plants some for myself. I took a bunch of berries and put them in a seed sprouter and all of them sprouted.. I should have quickly put them into soil and tried to see what took... i might try that method again and give my update on how that process works. I probably would have had about 300 sprouts that would have had a chance.
@myCreativeDifference Im glad to hear i inspired someone. that sounds really cool, if you could get a big goji farm like that. Good luck, let me know what happens if you grow through with it.
@myCreativeDifference I'm going to be filming my experience with growing the goji berries So we'll see how that goes. I would really like to see how your plant survives the winter and if you get berries during the summer
@myCreativeDifference im definitely going to make a video come next spring, and probably a few during the summer. i might also make one pretty soon just to document how its doing out there in the snow. im looking forward to seeing how yours comes out
@vornoff1958 Im in Long Island New York. Im not really sure how bad the winters get in Cleveland, but as long as it doesnt get below -15 degrees Fahrenheit your gojis should be good. They are plants that are supposed to endure the winter, they go through winters in their natural habitat. If your unsure about how they might handle the cold, then bring some inside, and leave some outside. It also depends how old your plants are. If theyre really young, bring em in, over 6 months theyre good
@ruderevival : I bought one at Home Depot about maybe 3 months a go and its only about 3 feet. It hasn't really grown to tall but it does have a lot of shoots. There are 4 stems on this plant thats how it came when i bought it and its growing berries. My daughter and me tried them and they are really good and sweet. I'm going to save some seeds and grow some. Fall is about here so i will keep them inside till spring and maybe by then i will have a few good plants. keep up your videos!
When I started mine in a pot it sprouted a second branch from the base and "monstrously" out grew the original. I was really shocked.
Spore0011 4 months ago
Bikerbabezzr, i dont feed my plants anything. I dont really believe in artificial fertilization. The only thing that i put in their is organic compost from my compost pile. I occasionally put some miracle grow vegetable feed in there, but thats only occasionally and not on any specific schedule.
ruderevival 7 months ago
how are they now?
PineGroveBird 1 year ago
@PineGroveBird Im sorry i havent made any videos lately, but ive been really busy lately. Ill try to get a video out soon. Right now there is about a foot of snow in my area, but the goji plant is holding up pretty well. The fence definitely protected it very well. This winter has been one of the worst in my area, we had some really bad snow storms, but the goji was protected by the fence pretty suffeciently. It developed a nice hard bark and it should sprout nicely in the spring.
ruderevival 1 year ago
@ruderevival
I also am growing Goji plants. there are 4inc high now and at least 3months old i give them Vitax Organic Seaweed and i mix it in boiled cold water. In all of your videos on here you talk about your plants there height and there goodness but you have never said what you feed your Goji on and as i live in Ireland i would like to know before winter comes around so i can get them good and strong.
BIKERBABEZZR 7 months ago
You've inspired me to plants some for myself. I took a bunch of berries and put them in a seed sprouter and all of them sprouted.. I should have quickly put them into soil and tried to see what took... i might try that method again and give my update on how that process works. I probably would have had about 300 sprouts that would have had a chance.
Thanks for the videos
myCreativeDifference 1 year ago
@myCreativeDifference Im glad to hear i inspired someone. that sounds really cool, if you could get a big goji farm like that. Good luck, let me know what happens if you grow through with it.
ruderevival 1 year ago
@myCreativeDifference I'm going to be filming my experience with growing the goji berries So we'll see how that goes. I would really like to see how your plant survives the winter and if you get berries during the summer
myCreativeDifference 1 year ago
@myCreativeDifference im definitely going to make a video come next spring, and probably a few during the summer. i might also make one pretty soon just to document how its doing out there in the snow. im looking forward to seeing how yours comes out
ruderevival 1 year ago
What state are you in? I have some gojis in pots here in Cleveland, Ohio. I'm not sure what to do during the winter. Do I take them inside this year?
vornoff1958 1 year ago
@vornoff1958 Im in Long Island New York. Im not really sure how bad the winters get in Cleveland, but as long as it doesnt get below -15 degrees Fahrenheit your gojis should be good. They are plants that are supposed to endure the winter, they go through winters in their natural habitat. If your unsure about how they might handle the cold, then bring some inside, and leave some outside. It also depends how old your plants are. If theyre really young, bring em in, over 6 months theyre good
ruderevival 1 year ago
Good job!
zuniga6412 1 year ago
@zuniga6412 thanks, its still growing like crazy, its just as tall as the fence now!
ruderevival 1 year ago
@ruderevival : I bought one at Home Depot about maybe 3 months a go and its only about 3 feet. It hasn't really grown to tall but it does have a lot of shoots. There are 4 stems on this plant thats how it came when i bought it and its growing berries. My daughter and me tried them and they are really good and sweet. I'm going to save some seeds and grow some. Fall is about here so i will keep them inside till spring and maybe by then i will have a few good plants. keep up your videos!
zuniga6412 1 year ago