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University of Kentucky Horticulture
Registrace 21. 03. 2011
The UKREC Horticulture Group mission is to support Kentucky Horticulture (nursery/landscape; tree fruit, small fruit, and grapes; vegetables). Research and trial results enable us to deliver research-based technology and sustainable production information to County Extension Agents, commercial horticulturists, farmers, biological scientists, service industry and agribusiness personnel, and consumers.
Greenhouse Educator Training - Teacher Perspectives from Whitley County
The Whitley County High School is near completion of their new greenhouse facility, where the Agriculture Program students grow hydroponic vegetables for sale in the community. In this session of Greenhouse Educators' Training, we hear from their teacher, Brian Prewitt, who has built up a successful ag-education program that draws popular support from both students and greater Whitley County residents.
We hope his perspective may help prospective or current greenhouse educators develop their own hydroponics curriculum.
For questions related to controlled-environment growing in Kentucky, or to provide feedback on this and future sessions of GET, please email arundathi.sharma@uky.edu or casey.byrd@uky.edu.
We hope his perspective may help prospective or current greenhouse educators develop their own hydroponics curriculum.
For questions related to controlled-environment growing in Kentucky, or to provide feedback on this and future sessions of GET, please email arundathi.sharma@uky.edu or casey.byrd@uky.edu.
zhlédnutí: 100
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How the NRCS Can Assist with your High Tunnel Tony Burnett, Supervisory District Conservationist, USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service High Tunnel Financing Information Daniel White, USDA Farm Service Agency
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Beginning High Tunnel Grower Series - Weed Management Options in High Tunnels Rachel Rudolph, Vegetable Extension Specialist, University of Kentucky
Beginning Farmer High Tunnel Production Basics: Webinar 1
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Green Educator Training High School Aquaponics
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Aquaponics is a nutrient cycling growing method that involves farming fish in controlled tanks, and using their waste to supply food crops with nutrients. In this session of Greenhouse Educator Training, we hear the perspective of those who are actually learning in an educational greenhouse facility. The student managers of the LaRue County High School aquaponics facility share their experience...
Greenhouse Educator Training Good Agricultural Practices (GAP)
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Some buyers will require that their vendors go through a third-party audit to verify the food safety practices of their farm. If your buyer requires an audit, then your best first step is to contact Bryan Brady. Bryan is the Cultivate Kentucky Senior Extension Associate and will provide one-on-one free consultation to determine what kind of audit is right for your farm. In this recorded webinar...
Greenhouse Educator Training Basics of Hydroponic Cropping Systems
zhlédnutí 494Před rokem
University of Kentucky Greenhouse Educator Training (G.E.T.) Series Basics of Hydroponic Cropping Systems Dr. Garrett Owen - UK Controlled Environment Horticulture Specialist - wgowen@uky.edu / greenhousehort.ca.uky.edu/)
Greenhouse Educator Training Common Pests & IPM
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University of Kentucky Greenhouse Educator Training (G.E.T.) Series Session 2 - Common Pests & IPM (Dr. Jonathan Larson - UK Entomology Extension Specialist - jonathan.larson@uky.edu / arthro-pod.blogspot.com/) Recorded May 16, 2022 04:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Greenhouse Educator Training Structures & Equipment
zhlédnutí 509Před 2 lety
University of Kentucky & Kentucky Horticulture Council Greenhouse Educator Training (G.E.T.) Series Session 1 - Structures & Equipment (Dr. Garrett Owen - UK Controlled Environment Horticulture Specialist - wgowen@uky.edu / greenhousehort.ca.uky.edu/) with additional information on Creating Eye-Catching Marketing Materials (McKenzie Fox - KHC Special Projects Coordinator - mckenzie@kyhortcounci...
Spade & Shovel Maintenance
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This video shows the difference between a low/no maintenance shovel, a spade useable and being recovered from neglect and a well maintained spade and how to keep a spade clean, sharp, sanitized and ready for digging plants.
Sharpen Your Grafting Knife
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 2 lety
Daniel Becker, UK Extension Associate for Fruit and Vegetables, teaches how to “Sharpen Your Grafting Knife” in a new video edited by UK Professional Videographer David Stalion in the UK CAFE Agricultural Communications Department
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zhlédnutí 323Před 2 lety
This is an update to the Pruner Care video with closeups done by UK Professional Videographer Davis Stalion.
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KY IPM Nursery/Landscape - Caring for Substrates
zhlédnutí 143Před 3 lety
The Kentucky Nursery-Landscape Integrated Pest Management KNL-IPM videos and podcasts are sponsored by Kentucky Integrated Pest Management from a USDA NIFA grant. This video is a conversation about managing substrates when growing and maintaining plants in containers. Resources: SNA Best Management Practices 3rd Edition contents.sna.org/bmpv30.html Cleanwater3 www.cleanwater3.org Monitoring irr...
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Osmanthus for the mid South - Lisa Alexander
zhlédnutí 246Před 7 lety
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Hola esos son Navajo? Yo dejaría 2 o 3 cañas aun los veo muy enmarañados 😢
it sure would be nice if you gave close up views of what he is talking about :( I still dont have any idea of what he calls weak or vigorous
Super informative!!!!! Sick of having to weed through "influencers" to find experts. Please keep these videos coming!!!!
Can old blueberry bushes be saved by pruning? I have some that look like trees.
How do you prune taller trees? Mine have grown about 6’.
So I guess this is how Ginkgo is grafted
😎
los felicito no es facil trasladar un arbol gracias
Thankz for sharing, ingat po kau
Thanks! I’ve been transplant ing trees and this method helps a lot.
There is NO evidence that any change in climate is caused by fossil fuels. Were there fossil fuels at the end of the ice age or during the other climate variations. The people spouting this say the temperatures now are warmer. Is that why the winter where I live was longer? The UN is just a bunch of people trying to justify their make-believe jobs, it should be scrapped as it is useless.
Very helpful video, thankyou.
i dont know how you measure that to dig 😳 please explain it.
ok what about the bottom do you burlap it again after you some how lift it out of the ground? That is slow and you could never make money that way.
Very good. thanks.
Arent you supposed to cut the upright thornless canes to 3ft?
It doesnt show the main root cutting that is usually found at the bottom of the root ball (strait below the tree trunk). Be carefull to get as much of possible length of this one without hurting it between the cutted end & the tree base. Better get a cup/cone shaped ball.
No slope, No stones in the soil, plenty of space around ; just ideal ;) Did one last year & used a lumber planck to help tilt it while refilling the pit with dirt. Then placed the ball on potting soil bags to help sliding the tree to the new location. Doing another one tomorrow (5/6 year old Blackthorn Prunus). Cheers.
What pruners is he using?
Valuable information in this video
I dont see many side shoots, they bare the most fruit
Thanks Awesome video !!
A great demonstration. Why don’t you cut the very long canes that are bending downwards? Will the fruit not just drag them down? Or perhaps you’re going to tie them to the wire?
I discovered a thicket of blackberries growing around my shed and they've already started to flower. I think they're an erect variety. Is it too late to prune and thin them out?
So helpful! I just moved into a house and there are blackberries stalks and I wanted to figure out how to take care of them instead of just letting them die
If only there were an easier way…sigh.
Do not use aluminum with fertilizer !
Thank you to teach us we just fallwed the video instructions and we transplanted a big oak yesterday between 9-10 thousand pounds Thank you
First and foremost, thanks for this video. I agree with another post that it would have been more helpful to see a close up of you pruning what you called "the twiggie peaces". I'm guessing My Blueberry plant is 20 - 24 years old and I have never pruned. We noticed the blueberries were not as good as years past and during the fruit cycle the leaves were showing a lot of gray spots and many leaves turned brown and fell off before all the fruit was gone. I trimmed it back last year but I didn't know your instructions and didn't remove the old shoots or the twiggie things. My plant is still much higher than yours. Can you give us an update on cutting the correct height ?
Hard to tell what you are doing in the long shots. More closeups would help explain it better.
I am legitimately interested in this man's demonstration...but every time he says "erect" I keep giggling. Too much caffeine this morning! 😝
Thanks excellent information and helpful. I have 2 of the 3 types mentioned.
Thank you Dr Strang still one of the better pruning blueberry videos CZcams
Thank you for posting this valuable information.
Wish you filmed closer
Thanks for this video. I hope, I could replant my fir tree tomorrow using the info you gave in this video. Do you know by any chance, if I cut some roots by my fir tree, will my tree survive it? My fir tree is about 5 and half feet at the moment, I started to dig around it today and some roots go far away from the tree, I won't be able to take any single root without cutting some. The tree is gorgeous, we planted it next to my rose and it grew very fast almost killed my beautiful rose. We decided to replant the tree in a different corner of our backyard. I hope, it won't die if we cut some roots. Thanks in advance for any answer.
How did it turn out? Any useful lessons?
Gained some idea.... what will happen if trim and transplant?
Today I transplanted a tree but only knew today too late
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My Triple Crown Semi Erect Blackberries have primo canes that are very long and the canes are very large in circumference. If I cut them to 5 ft tall and cut the side branches to 16", at this point in March, will they still fruit? Scared to prune so heavily. Thanks.
Did you ever get an answer to this question? It is now September and I am wondering if I should cut my laterals to 18 inches now... Do you know?
I wish I would have seen this before I transplanted a substantial Japanese Maple today. Great tips. This is the best transplant video I've seen.
Thank you.
Why are shovels so damn short?!
I assume all these canes are new canes from last season and that fruiting canes were removed?
OK that was answered 4:40. All my new growth canes are just long and straight with no laterals. I thought last year if I cut the fruiting ones down to the ground and then dressed the then new growth onto the framework they would grow laterals and fruit. Can't remember if they did as I forgot to tie marker ribbons on.
@@FrankEdavidson blackberries canes don't put on a lot of laterals by themselves. Left to themselves they'll grow as tall as they can and fall over, put out a lateral (which becomes another vertical cane that flops over itself). They kinda do this to spread out and increase their chance of survival through air-layering where they contact the ground. But, the laterals are a response to damage, historically this would have been when a bison or deer ate the cane or trampled it. With the apical bud damaged or removed, the hormone that the apical structure is producing to inhibit the growth of lateral buds (which would steal resources away from it's desired trend of growing as tall as possible) ceases inhibiting them and the laterals bud out, each producing their own hormones to inhibit the budding of lateral buds closer to the ground which would compete with *them*. Agriculture manages that damage. Instead of a ruminant chewing/breaking off the tip haphazardly, the farmer comes in with some clean secutures and makes a clean cut the plant can easily survive. To the plant, how the damage happens is irrelevant, it just responds chemically. And instead of letting them grow vertically and flopping over aimlessly, they're constrained by some trellis structure.
I don’t quite get it. The 2nd year canes fruit. You cut out the first year canes to promote growth...which is also the following years fruiters.
They fruit on last year's new canes. At the end of the season cut fruiting canes back.
it's 2020, so presume i germinated a seed, it would have started growing in spring. That cane (a prima-cane) is a vegetative stalk. That's ALL it will do all year. Typically you want to tip it somewhere around 3-4 feet, to promote the growth of laterals. Come winter, that cane will lignify and undergo some chemical processes to convert itself to a flora-cane. And in the late-winter/early-spring of 2021, that cane will produce flowers, and later fruit. Simultaneously to producing fruit, 1-7 new prima-canes will emerge from the root zone (depending on vigor/health). After the flora-canes have borne fruit, they will die, rapidly. Those canes may be taken out entirely, and you're left with just 2021s prima-canes. These canes are then tipped as well, again to induce lateral budding, and later still in the year, those laterals are trimmed back. At this point, some of those prima-canes can be removed entirely to avoid stressing the plant with a high-fruit load the following spring. In the winter of 2021, the prima-canes you left lignify and convert to flora-canes. in the spring of 2022, they produce flowers and later fruit. New Prima-canes emerge, and the flora-canes die, and the cycle just keeps going on and on and on until the plant dies. There are some blackberries that will convert to flora-canes right after summer, produce a meager crop in the fall, and then a larger crop the following spring (like typical varieties do). But i seriously doubt you'll get your hands on those without spending $$$.
@@maxdecphoenix I have cut back all my flowering growth from this 2020 crop and now I am wondering if it is too early to cut the laterals to 18 inches (It is Labor Day) Some of them are getting really long. I don't know what kind of blackberries we have as they were already here when we bought the house. My crop this year was better than last year's as I figured out a little bit how to take care of them. Now I want to do a better job for 2021. Thanks for your input.
@@boysrus61 'flowering growth' as in literal, white flowers? Or do you possibly mean 'vegetative'?
@@boysrus61 or are you talking about canes which bore fruit back in march-may?
I am just getting started with these berries and found this site extremely information. Looking forward to more videos.
CSU 260 HORT what uup
what time of year do you do this?
usful tips thanks
That hand pruner is neither a by pass nor a anvil pruner . It is like a wire cutter . Is that so you seal the cuts to exude fungal spores ? Where did you get it and what is that type of pruner called