>onion setsI put in a bed of yellow onion sets yesterday (pic). I had to add 600lbs of sand and stir it in. I have like 3 more beds to plant onion sets in. I'll remove them as I need room for other plants, but leave them between the other plants. I used the bottom spikes of the cattle panel to mark the holes for planting the onions. It worked really well.
I also HIGHLY recommend people get one of these, I've been using one for years for manure, sand, gravel, etc:
Truck Bed Cargo Unloader ($39.99)
http://www.harborfreight.com/truck-bed-cargo-unloader-60800.html>>976679>>976819Looking good!
>>976817Add:
Allium tuberosum (garlic chives)
Lepidium sativum (garden cress)
Satureja hortensis (summer savory)
Satureja montana (winter savory)
Nepeta cataria (catnip; likes sandy well draining soils)
Trigonella foenum-graecum (fenugreek)
Raphanus sativus (radish; for leaves)
Crocus sativus (saffron crocus; for saffron)
>>976825>i'm completely in the dark.Try mushrooms! Do you want to grow things to eat or look at? If it is for viewing, pick a neat plant and research how to care for it. If it is for food, make a list of foods you eat, look up the recipes, find out what is in them, select those fruits/veggies, research how to grow them.
>>976840> what are some other things that can go out super early?Most brassica plants. Like cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, etc. Same thing for late season when it gets colder. All lily family plants (onions, garlic, leek, ramps), asparagus (crowns, not seeds; seeds after last frost), carrot family plants.