Svenness, I would cut it at the ground. It'll love you for it.
For a first year plant I would disagree. You want all the initial growth you can get the first year. That will help establish the rhizome for the next year. I left mine alone first year, just let them grow as they wanted. This year, my second, might have even been a bit too early to cut back because a couple of them really took the shock hard.
(Willamette and centennial took it as a challenge though and are going crazy.)
New poster here, new grower giving it a try on a SC Sea Island. Farmer neighbor prepped a strip of his land and put in a trellis system (4in plastic net on 2x4s set about 9ft high) maybe 200ft long. He put in plastic on a raised long bed and ran irrigation for us. We planted ( a week ago) 3 rhizomes each of 6 types to see what happens. Checked the plantation yesterday and had one (a Centennial) sprouting so at least we know one is growing!
Will keep the internets advised!
Someone mentioned pH. What is the optimal pH for hop growing?
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Just one one here. The rest can be seen on my thread. Pic was as of Sunday. Around 50 percent of the plants are already 16 feet tall. Pretty solid second year starting for my 96 plants
These are my Chinook from Sunday:
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These are my Chinook from Sunday:
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Mother of nature! DAMN that is impressive. You going pro at this? Are you going organic or how do you deliver all the nitrogen necessary? Do you have a watering system for the hot months? How are you going to do pest control and mildew control?
Come on, spill!
These are my Chinook from Sunday:
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My Cascade from the same day:
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Hope this answers all of your questions. Our entire harvest this year will be purchased by adventure brewing company in stafford. Expansion is a possibility in the future.
Here's a shot of my three varieties.
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Nuggets are growing well, as are the cascades. Centennials are coming along, better than last year. This is second year growth.