jMac
Regular.
Looking good! Any idea of the weight you’ve gathered there? Also what variety and from how many plants?Lots of papery sounds and a few browning so stripped the bines today. Will leave in the shed to dry
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Looking good! Any idea of the weight you’ve gathered there? Also what variety and from how many plants?Lots of papery sounds and a few browning so stripped the bines today. Will leave in the shed to dry
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The 500g of ripe Prima Donna (First Gold) hops I picked two days ago have produced about 140g of dry hops, which is slightly more than I anticipated. I weigh the hops from time to time as I dry them, and when they get to the stage where the weight loss is more or less negligible that's when I call it a day as far as drying is concerned.
Following on from the previous years efforts I will have enough for about 60 litres of 'Garden First Gold' GFGs 7, 8 and 9 which are my single hop light pale ales and will be using CML First Gold as bittering hops and the garden hops as late hops, although in the past have used all garden hops and guessed the %AA as about 5% and was probably not far out. Hope this years crop is as good as previous years. Not sure about the enthusiasm thoughHope you’re feeling a bit more enthusiastic on the home grown hops front now . That must be enough for a couple of brews surely? And the toil of your homegrown hops will make the finished product all the sweeter (or bitterer, I guess ).
Pretty chuffed to see cones that are almost ready on my 1 year old. And my 3 off-cuts are doing really well too.
Waiting to get my hands on 4 obelisks cheaply to put in my barrel planters for next year
It's a cutting from a garden hop I was given several years ago so most likely Prima Donna. Now grows up each year in my hedge. Got about 200g dry weight last year, looks about the same.Looking good! Any idea of the weight you’ve gathered there? Also what variety and from how many plants?
Is your Prima Donna potted or in the ground?Just picked my Prima Donna today, about 500g wet, now in the food dehydrator at 50c. They're a bit cramped so I'll be rotating and mixing them up as we go. Quite pleased with the yeald considering I neglected them a bit and quite a few ends had dried up. That and a naughty bird nibbled of one of the growing tips! Still, not bad for three bines from the one plant.
Also, the elderberries had come good, so I've just picked those and have about 250g going into the freezer.
Thinking a sweet porter made from both of these could work, don't have a recipe yet though...
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My two are also in 20 litre potsIts in a big *** pot. 20l I think, the biggest cheap plastic one B&Q did at least 5 years ago.
Mine wereI usually try and keep them well, but not over, watered, if it’s hot I’ll give the pot a full watering can of water every other day. Every fortnight I give everything a liquid feed of miracle grow but guess I’ve just been lucky. They are in a south facing spot and get sun most of the day, as they get taller I remove all the foliage from the bottom foot or so and try and keep on top of removing the dead leaves from the bottom and any other shoots from the soil level as they appear. They get the odd pest on them but they seem pretty tough and keep coming back for more!
So the only difference is that mine did not get as much sun as yours
You are right about watering, I though I had lost my plants after I let them go dry last year on a very hot day in June, and they wilted and I lost a lot of leaves. Lesson learned. So this year my hops were well watered nearly every day irrespective of the weather. And I keep my pots outside throughout the year. Plus the pots were not exposed to direct sunlight. Summats not rightYou also have to factor in just how dry it's been in the SE this year - and hops are very thirsty plants, farmers reckon on each full-size plant using 50-80 litres per week. If it's not raining, you have to supply all that (although dwarf varieties like Primadonna will obviously need less). And also you can have issues in pots with the roots overheating etc.
The other thing that's become more of a concern recently is them not getting enough cold in winter - people with pots can be tempted to keep them inside over winter "to protect them from frost" but that's exactly what they need to set a full crop.
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