NHHostas
NHHostas
  • Видео 19
  • Просмотров 1 014 638
Vole Control: Portable Castor Oil Injector
In this video, we demonstrate an easy and effective method to protect your gardens from voles.
Items needed:
Injector
Hand truck
Board and EMT clips for mounting
5 gallon bucket
Bungee cord
Mixing stick
Ingredients:
Castor oil - 1 to 2 cups
Dish detergent - 1/3 cup
Water - 5 gallons
Injection set 1 to 100 parts (=500 gallons)
NOTE: Primary time of application is after frost but three weeks before soil freezing
www.nhhostas.com/
Просмотров: 38 399

Видео

How Late in the Fall Can I Plant Hostas?
Просмотров 41 тыс.8 лет назад
nhhostas.com - Autumn Has Perfect Planting Weather For Your Hostas! Warmed by the golden days, your container grown hosta plants will quickly establish strong roots. The cooler nights help your hostas prepare for winter’s approach. Richard Merritt of New Hampshire Hostas talks about the benefits to your hosta of planting in the Fall and what pitfalls to avoid.
Hosta Companion Plants: Early Season Beauties
Просмотров 31 тыс.9 лет назад
Nhhostas.com - Eager to see signs of Spring in your hosta garden after a long winter? The bright colors of early season companion plants will gladden your eye. Take a tour of our hosta gardens and see how Helleborus, crocus, snowdrops, daffodils, primrose and others can compliment the emerging hostas and extend your growing season.
Caring for Container Hosta
Просмотров 52 тыс.9 лет назад
Nhhostas.com - Container gardening with hosta plants. When to divide hostas, what type of potting soil and compost to use, drainage for your pot, storing your container in winter.
Fall Hosta Garden Cleanup 101
Просмотров 69 тыс.9 лет назад
nhhostas.com - Find out what the optimum time is to clean your Hosta Garden in the Fall. How to protect your Hosta crowns during the winter from freezing temps and thieving voles.
This Week In Our Hosta Garden: Fragrant Hostas
Просмотров 6 тыс.9 лет назад
nhhostas.com - Fragrant hostas are summer's sweet reward to gardeners. See our collection! For those of you in the southern states that struggle with your hostas in the summer heat, the fragrant hostas perform better than other types in the heat. For the northern states, the fragrant hostas tend to perform better in the sun than other types.
This Week in Our Hosta Garden: Ferns
Просмотров 10 тыс.10 лет назад
Nhhostas.com Hardy ferns and how to use them in your garden. The difference in texture, form and contrast. Introducing Godzilla, a 36 inch Japanese painted fern.
This Week In Our Hosta Garden: Understory Trees
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.10 лет назад
Nhhostas.com - Take a tour of understory trees - trees that have plants growing under their canopy of leaves and branches. Interesting trees to use in your garden include a pink and green Japanese maple. Learn a trick with burlap to stop a newly seeded area from washing out.
Hosta Plants - See The Size of the Hostas That We Sell
Просмотров 21 тыс.10 лет назад
At www.nhhostas.com/ we ship container grown hosta plants and companion plants in generously sized 4 1/2 inch pots for our large varieties and deep 3 inch containers for some of our small and all of our miniature hostas. We also offer starter hosta plant plugs. Watch our Show-and-Tell of how big our hosta plants are in May at the start of the growing season.
This Week In Our Hosta Garden - Early May
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.10 лет назад
Welcome to www.nhhostas.com series on planting a hosta garden. See how to create a hosta garden and get timely answers to your gardening questions. Comment, share, and subscribe! Visit us at pages/New-Hampshire-Hostas/246716655143?ref=search Would you like more info on slugs? www.nhhostas.com/slugs.htm
Giant Hostas - When Size Matters
Просмотров 132 тыс.11 лет назад
New Hampshire Hostas owner Richard Merritt talks about giant hostas and how to use them in the garden.
Spectacular Way to Use Hostas in the Garden
Просмотров 13 тыс.11 лет назад
New Hampshire Hostas owner visits employee Sherri's garden in Hampton Falls, NH
Take A Hosta Garden Tour In New Hampshire
Просмотров 6 тыс.11 лет назад
NHHostas.com A hosta garden with over 1,000 hosta varieties. Landscaped with rhododendrons, Japanese Maples and more. Join New Hampshire Hostas owner Richard Merritt as he talks with Sherri in her southern New Hampshire garden.
How To Use Mini Hostas In Your Garden
Просмотров 13 тыс.12 лет назад
NHHostas.com How to accent your garden with small, very small and miniature hostas. Join New Hampshire Hostas manager PJ Beaulier in a "show-and-tell" of hosta ideas from "The Book of Little Hostas," from landscaping with hostas to growing hostas in containers.
How To Keep Slugs & Snails Out Of Your Hosta Garden
Просмотров 69 тыс.12 лет назад
Join New Hampshire Hostas owner Richard Merritt as he explains how to use Sluggo organic bait control to keep slugs and snails away from your hosta garden. Yes, beer slug traps do work, but Sluggo does it faster and more effectively.
Voles & Mice: How To Have A Vole-Free Garden. Organic Recipe Included!
Просмотров 143 тыс.12 лет назад
Voles & Mice: How To Have A Vole-Free Garden. Organic Recipe Included!
Hosta Pest Control - Deer
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.13 лет назад
Hosta Pest Control - Deer
"The Hostapedia" - A Review By A Hosta Grower
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.13 лет назад
"The Hostapedia" - A Review By A Hosta Grower
How To Divide & Propagate Your Hostas
Просмотров 363 тыс.13 лет назад
How To Divide & Propagate Your Hostas

Комментарии

  • @dfu1685
    @dfu1685 7 часов назад

    Oh my gosh! Please just give the recipe and then do the him n haw about woodpeckers and your favorite sweaters🙄🥱

    • @dfu1685
      @dfu1685 7 часов назад

      Sorry. I should have kept it to myself. Apologies. Thank you for your video.

  • @debradiggs7489
    @debradiggs7489 4 дня назад

    I lostball 11 of mine

  • @flyoverurbangarden4315
    @flyoverurbangarden4315 14 дней назад

    You have the best quality hosta!

  • @shannonforusa45
    @shannonforusa45 Месяц назад

    Any organic chipmunk deterrent ideas?

  • @soniamonia573
    @soniamonia573 Месяц назад

    I tried, can’t watch whole thing 😭😭 This is impossible to watch So much unnecessary information 🤦🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @lynnmanning2795
    @lynnmanning2795 Месяц назад

    Thanks for this major insite, I am in Mass. And humid to damp. So slugo will be my next trip to find it thank😊 you again.

  • @kammhron
    @kammhron 2 месяца назад

    Hi, Do you think that garlic powder will also work? Thanks.

  • @dustinferris9702
    @dustinferris9702 2 месяца назад

    your dog eating the snow in the beginning made me giggle

  • @liemnguyen5264
    @liemnguyen5264 2 месяца назад

    Can I use the same mixture to get squirrels away? They are destroying my garden and persimmon fruits.

  • @nattyw495
    @nattyw495 3 месяца назад

    Enjoyed video found it interesting and informative thank you..

  • @neophytebutterfly
    @neophytebutterfly 5 месяцев назад

    It’s February, and I just discovered vole’s throughout my garden. Can I apply it now? The soil is soggy after our PNW freeze then rain.

  • @Lsutube963
    @Lsutube963 10 месяцев назад

    Sorry - giving up. WAY too much gab, I don’t have time. Nor am I inserted in your vacation details.

  • @P_Belle
    @P_Belle Год назад

    You are so helpful!

  • @Yayahey
    @Yayahey Год назад

    OMG this would be great if you got right to the info! Too many tangents. But great advice.

  • @bonniemccormack1361
    @bonniemccormack1361 Год назад

    At the end it shows the deep green shrub contrasting beautifully with the hostas

  • @suesue2271
    @suesue2271 Год назад

    Wow!

  • @jennasorscia9044
    @jennasorscia9044 Год назад

    I know this is an old video but I just wanted to thank you for an easy and simple solution!

  • @KaleyRaw
    @KaleyRaw Год назад

    I call them baby Hostas. I have found dozens of tiny little ones in my back yard., in three varieties. Thank you for the neat ideas on how to display them 😊.

  • @alanprice9712
    @alanprice9712 Год назад

    Can you use the castor oil mixture on vegetables?

  • @shannonforusa45
    @shannonforusa45 Год назад

    Thank you for this advice. In NH, too. Just applied your Castor Oil mix around my potatoe beds. Fingers crossed!

  • @doniellestenson3502
    @doniellestenson3502 Год назад

    They remind me of endless summer afternoons.

  • @CathyHautz04
    @CathyHautz04 Год назад

    This is the only thing that has helped me out. I highly recommend it.

  • @dlebreton7888
    @dlebreton7888 Год назад

    I like to use a machete or a large, sharp garden knife to cut the clump. Easier for me than a shovel. I cut the clump into pieces, dig a hole, put a mix of compost and fresh soil, set the piece of hosta in, water the hole and fill in with more soil. Never lost a transplant. One of my favorite garden jobs.

  • @cervelott
    @cervelott Год назад

    Love that woodpecker! Right on cue…

  • @emmapecchia2612
    @emmapecchia2612 Год назад

    Need cc

  • @emmapecchia2612
    @emmapecchia2612 Год назад

    Need cc

  • @drg3712
    @drg3712 Год назад

    Thought it was funny that you said Southern Alaska and skipped over Canada. Not offended you ignored just thought it was funny as we definitely have Voles and Mic and need advice. Having said that, we don't own a cat and don’t have owls, hawks or coyotes here in Alberta… at least not in my backyard 😀. So, appreciate the advice but I am only interested in exterminating these things.

  • @quick9smitty511
    @quick9smitty511 2 года назад

    I watched your other video in which you recommended a 1:1 ratio of dish soap to castor oil in one gallon of water. (time stamp 2:48)l. Here it's different. (1-2 c castor oil:1/3 c detergent: 5 gal water) (time stamp 4:59). I'm a home gardener so won't be investing in this fancy system. Will the soap oil combo damage the plants. Looks here like you are spraying it on the plants as well as the soil.

  • @edwardlomax7842
    @edwardlomax7842 2 года назад

    Which model Dosatron(?) injector did you use in this video? I suspect that this and other general specifications for this and/or a similar injector will be very helpful for me and other interested viewers.

  • @marygee3981
    @marygee3981 2 года назад

    ☀️The best way is to remove their fav. food source, grubs. Use milky spore granuals, works abt 10 yrs! www.domyown.com/how-to-get-rid-of-grubs-a-584.html

  • @HolaJules
    @HolaJules 2 года назад

    Thank you, do you know if September would be a good time now in 2022? For the midwest?

  • @markpiersall9815
    @markpiersall9815 2 года назад

    Install a Barn Owl nest box; a nesting pair will eat more than 3,000 voles and mice in a breeding season.. To eliminate slugs set empty tuna cans out in depressions in the earth and fill them with beer at dusk.

  • @thatlittlevoice8292
    @thatlittlevoice8292 2 года назад

    Timing isn't everything. I did this once in early December in eastern Ontario, in a miserable cold rain that was just turning into our first big dump of wet snow. Everything was cold, wet and muddy. Come spring, all of the pieces grew back as though nothing had ever happened.

    • @dlebreton7888
      @dlebreton7888 Год назад

      I lived in Northern Ontario and preferred to split my hostas in the Spring. I was too nervous to do it late in the year. You were fortunate.

  • @kevinstanton7338
    @kevinstanton7338 2 года назад

    Can you split them as much as rhubarb?

  • @casandradickinson8518
    @casandradickinson8518 2 года назад

    Lovely😃

  • @josieraimondi6763
    @josieraimondi6763 2 года назад

    Do you sell hosta plugs (liners) ? Do you have an availability list?

  • @wpchastain
    @wpchastain 2 года назад

    Thanks for the information

  • @mabelgoddard5813
    @mabelgoddard5813 2 года назад

    I found you podcast just in time! After the snow melted I saw a lot of paths on the grass and mounds on flower bed . Thank you so much for the information. I too like to work as organic as I can possibly can. Your video was worth to watch!!👏👏👏

  • @ghostridergale
    @ghostridergale 2 года назад

    I would absolutely love to go to Ireland! I’m Irish on my mom’s side. Her maiden name was Goodnight. Never hear that last name in the U.S., least I haven’t yet! Myself I love the Irish accent and the land over there from what I’ve seen on shows is gorgeous! Heard about their hospitality, would love to find out what that’s like myself someday too? My dad was French, but I’ve always been more attracted to the Irish people and their country! Be a dream to go there!

  • @plips71755
    @plips71755 2 года назад

    What I don’t understand is why these plugs and basic liners cost so much. Yes I know things have gone up but I also know what wholesale prices look like and the pricing of plants in todays market is about as crazy as houses and cars and anything else. It has to stop somewhere - just because John Doe can get $17 for a .90 plant does that mean everyone should charge the same. There are too many middle men in the market and too many investment firms buying up all the family nurseries when they age out or the kids don’t have the backbone to do what their great grandparents did with a lot less money and time since you didn’t have some of the technology available today. When I look at what those in countries like Netherlands are doing in automation and America is so far behind - it’s kinda nutty. We have to make the jump - so that lack of help doesn’t sink smaller houses/nurseries. In addition, I see so many comments of people disappointed by plants they get either what they receive or they are healthy looking but they lose them anyway. People don’t realize you can stick a plug or liner out in their yards in blazing hot sun and expect them to live through tough weather conditions. But by the time they die in mid summer, the warranty is long gone. These plugs and liners need to be repotted into larger containers. They can’t be direct planted in a big garden except for the best of care and beginning gardeners don’t realize how much tender loving care they need. A 2 gallon container is a different ball game. It’s got the strength and maturity to handle a little tougher situation - still needs care but not like a plug. These folks get disappointed and end up getting rid of beds and planting grass or putting down rocks or mounds of bark. I think it’s a shame that plugs/liners that nurseries use to buy and spend a year moving up the line are now sold almost as soon as the distributor sends the flats to them and at the same prices they use to get for 1-2 year big multi eye plants. We use to never get less than 3-5 eye hostas and many times from good houses much larger. Today you get 1 eye- 1 stem. It’s a shame. Same for peonies, daylilies, etc. Thank goodness there is still one or two that you get sent very large newspaper wrapped bare root fresh dug plants. Today that same plant is cut down to 12-20 one eye plants. I have gotten where I don’t want to buy online and try to buy local - much nicer plants and if I let them know a year ahead what I’m looking for, they will order plugs in and grow on so by the time the fall planting season comes around those plants have grown big and filled the gal to 2 gal size containers so I can divide if I want to. But I prefer to put them in the ground and wait 3 years to lift and divide or slice through without removing the whole plant. Same for shrubs. And annuals - oh my gosh - nurseries are buying seed at bulk wholesale planting them and selling at 2.5” pots for $8.50-$15. For an annual that’s got one year of life and the nurseries paid pennies. I’m a almost 70 year old with a good 50 yrs gardening including selling perennials, shrubs, annuals. I’m looking at opening an orchid greenhouse after growing them for so long and it amazes me the machines that do all the in pot planting and of course the long held automatic seeding. But also machines that automatically move flats and pots, even wash and sterilize flats, etc. but all the ability to reuse water by treating, controllers for all environmental controls, and so much more. Systems that move stock around, systems that use specialized lightening and cameras to determine

  • @smhollanshead
    @smhollanshead 2 года назад

    Thank you for the information. In the future, please consider organizing your thoughts before you speak. You tend to ramble. If you’re looking for areas to cut, consider minimizing your green agenda. Most people want information not indoctrination.

  • @aletheasaccoccia2614
    @aletheasaccoccia2614 2 года назад

    Great video, thank you!!!

  • @sanmaran1
    @sanmaran1 2 года назад

    Thanks. Very good advice……A few days ago I noticed 3 of my Hosta had vanished…..found the holes…….I am going to use the castor oil treatment…..hope it works…….we use to have the pileated woodpecker in Arkansas……Miss those noisy birds….They are amazing

  • @lisaf7688
    @lisaf7688 2 года назад

    Watched both videos. Thanks for the information! I’ll be taking the advice.

  • @enchantedherbshop
    @enchantedherbshop 2 года назад

    Thank you for being gentle on this Earth.

  • @IMLovelydove23
    @IMLovelydove23 2 года назад

    Wow those hosta are colossal. 😳Nice🌟😊💐

  • @joeygagliardi7380
    @joeygagliardi7380 2 года назад

    Thanks for a Great visual of what I like. They really are awesome without all the bright colors. Have a great day and all the best in 2021.

  • @kevinhutchinson8129
    @kevinhutchinson8129 2 года назад

    Thank you Richard. I'm in NC and your time based dividing methodology is hopefully just what I need. I've got some Hosta's that I moved from OH to here when I moved down here 14 years ago and a friend wants some, so knowing when to dig them up has been very helpful! Thanks again!!!

  • @lydiageorge4306
    @lydiageorge4306 3 года назад

    Too much babbling ☹️

  • @4_14_fan
    @4_14_fan 3 года назад

    The title was cut off when I clicked and I thought it said "How to have a vole farm" Needless to say I'm deeply disappointed