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GARDENING IN THE PHILIPPINES

Discussion in 'Hobbies and special interests' started by DAVE1952, Jun 2, 2022.

  1. DAVE1952

    DAVE1952 DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer

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    Having been an amateur gardener for most of my adult life, I have wanted to try this out here, mostly to supply Vegetables for the family use and maybe some Flowers also?
    I have spoken with quite a few others here that have tried this and failed, in most cases their trial plant was Tomatoes, the strong sunlight here really burns them up. another reason why many give up is; keeping down the weeds they grow as fast as lightning here, they need to be knocked down almost daily miss one day and you have three times the work to get rid of them the following day.

    Building a house here has put my idea on the back burner and I never did quite get around to it, my partner did have a go, but this never worked out for her, the weeds were just laughing at her, we have a neighbour opposite us and she is attempting to Garden here with little experience and the weeds are laughing at her also, growing plants here that are better suited to where I come from may not do all that well? as daylight hours here during their normal growing season are at best around 12.5hrs, back in UK at the peak times of the growing season our average is well over 12hours maybe as much as 14hrs, on the 21st of June we have 18hrs, all plants have a growth spurt at this time in UK.

    But in spite of all the above I really do think it is possible to have a lot of success with Gardening here and this can be done even in a very small Garden.

    If/when I get around to it my intention is to erect a Polytunnel frame of around 24ft x 12ft and cover this with 3/4inch netting, this will keeps most Butterflies out and stop the Caterpillars, on the roof and south side of this tunnel I would have shade netting, this will solve the problem of the sun burning up the plants. most of this area would have raised growing beds.

    Keeping down the weeds is a back breaking job, but not so if you grow in raised beds ( ideal height would be around 30inches high) you could almost attend to this sitting down, if the beds are filled with a friable growing medium weeds can easily be pulled out by hand, in a garden most ornamental plants and veggies do not root any further down than 6 inches and many need less than this, in a prepared raised bed you will encourage deep rooting and thereby plants can be spaced closer together, through years of experience I learned that growing plants in rows looks nice but thinning them out to the ideal spaces as suggested by the book or on the packet is so very wasteful, it is just Fecking stupid and not so very practical, better to broadcast the seeds in a wider area and never thin them out, for example when you pull up a handful of carrots grown in this way you will get a dozen small ones a few medium and a couple of really large ones, the small ones you rinse under the tap and eat raw one minute after they have been pulled, the taste us amazing, the medium and the large are for cooking, zero waste. much the same applies to most other Veg.

    Having grown many of the Brassica family, (Cabbages, Cauli and Broccoli to name a few) over many years, I would suggest they would not do all that well here as they tend to need a long slow growing season to produce tight hearts and heads, but using some form of daylight lighting to extend the day may be the answer? (I used a fish tank Light in my Greenhouse Propagator back home) using a light with a small solar panel and battery kind of lends itself to the idea of growing your own, adding a couple of small fans has a beneficial effect on the plants they do grow faster with a simulated wind on them.

    One other good reason for growing your own and this especially applies to here in the Philippines, when you buy Veg here you will never see any sign of insect damage are they using some form of pesticide that is likely to be banned in other parts of the world?
     
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  2. Garcia

    Garcia DI Senior Member

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    Hi good subject matter, would various types of potatoes, root vegetables grow OK in the Philippines? Organic must be the better way health wise, any pesticides best avoided completely IMO.
     
  3. God Bless Texas

    God Bless Texas DI Member

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    I would add a toplayer of mulch, which here I have found the use of sawdust from the cutting of coconut trees. It is easy enough to bag and then spred over the bed. It also helps in supressing weeds.

    For those of you in Duma, consider going to Starbucks and Bo's, see if they will give you the used coffee grounds.
    In the StatesS tarbucks normally have a corner in the store where used grounds are placed 3lbs at a time, and it is first come first serve. In Tx we would take a morning a month and go to the locations we knew had LOTS (around collage campus) come home with about 100lbs, and add that to the yard. The plants LOVED it (and the soil was alkaline so the coffee also balanced that), slugs and snails hate it, and the whole yard smelled good.
     
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    DAVE1952

    DAVE1952 DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer

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    DAVE1952

    DAVE1952 DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer

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    I think it would be highly possible to grow anything you want here, germination of seeds will be fairly easy, heat being the No1 requirement, but perhaps the end result may not quite compare with what we know back in our own countries? but for sure shading of some form will be required for most plants that are green and leafy, but root crops not so much, if you grow Potatoes in a heavily shaded area you will produce long green leafy tops but they will have very little at the bottom. pesticides are required but there are organic types that can be used and made up in the home, one very old cure was Tobacco leaves boiled up to extract the juice and then sprayed on the plants, {but not Tomatoes they do not like it} this is possible here as they can be bought very cheaply, all home made pesticides require some soap in them, Chillies and Garlic are quite effective in the mix also. The Key to success with any form of Gardening is know how and when to water, a light spraying every day can be detrimental to plants, it is better to water heavily 2 or 3 times a week and get that water deep down in the soil to encourage deep rooting.
     
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  6. Garcia

    Garcia DI Senior Member

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    A lot of the vegetables I've seen in local Philippines markets come in all nobbly shapes, unlike UK supermarkets where the perfectly formed shape seems to want to give the impression of tasting good. This being far from true. Might be difficult for green leaves to get enough sun without getting burnt, some kind of netting to reduce direct sun light or a semi shaded area.

    I do recall seeing tobacco leaves in the market along with chillies, although chillies are easily grown. Organic pesticides sound OK I guess unless the same netting would stop the butterflies etc, what purpose does the soap do? Noted something new regarding heavy watering for deep roots growth thanks
     
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    DAVE1952

    DAVE1952 DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer

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    Soap is a surfactant in other words a wetting agent and also with some insects it dissolves the protective wax on their outer skin and kills them, light watering where you only water the surface encourages root growth at the surface for the sun to burn up these roots at the hottest part of the day, green leafy plants do well in the shade, one other thing I would suggest with this intensive raised bed culture, having a couple of Rabbits works well along side this, they produce the perfect manure that can be put directly at the roots of the plants, where chicken manure tends to burn them, Rabbits produce the healthiest meat of nearly all animals, but killing, cleaning and then eating them is not for everyone?
     
  8. Garcia

    Garcia DI Senior Member

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    Thanks for the soap explanation. Green leaves are very important for health, packed with fiber and vitamins, can't beat freshly picked very lightly steamed. Regards the rabbits, a bloke on Bohol had some running around their garden, they seemed quite self sufficient? Made quite a site along with 2 roosters and a few chickens, all were pets, not for consumption and seemed to get along just fine. As I've not eaten meat for nearly 40 years any rabbits would have a good life. Protein wise a little fresh fish or seafood is healthier in my opinion.
     
  9. jimeve

    jimeve DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer Veteran Army

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    Grown some bell peppers grown from seed, started to flower after only 3 weeks after replanting from seedlings. and got a lot of peppers after only 4 weeks.
    My first time growing anything.
     
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