shantigrows
Member
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2014
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 1
,.....
The southern edge of North Carolina gets about 14 hours of day length at the Summer Solstice. Hops prefer 15 hours to cone properly. Less day length can reduce yields; sometimes significantly. This is actually why growers in the far Southern States have to use artificial lighting to get normal yields. That's exactly why you don't see commercial hopyards down south
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-Brian
GLH
- Best, so far: Same as the last. I keep dropping it down as it hits the top. But instead of leaving it where it falls, I start wrapping the bine and twine around the pole in a barber's pole fashion. So now I get 12 to 15 feet of growth compacted into the first 2 to 3 feet of the pole, its all going "up", nothing is in the soil. It just seems happier. Eventually though, it turns into an ugly bush at the top because side arms are going in every direction and tangling themselves up. But I guess beauty isn't priority number 1 here, right?
Do you have any pics of this option? I'm limited in space on the home-front and had thought about doing this, but never seen anyone else doing it this way. :rockin:
I couldn't find a picture that didn't have someone standing in front of it. Sorry. I ran outside to take a picture but everything is buried in snow. Remind me in the spring and I"ll snap a couple of pictures...of course with the winter we are having in WI, spring won't be until June.