Hamakua Harvest Festival Focused on Healthy Farming for Healthy Communities
Don’t miss Hamakua Harvest Farm Festival, Honokaa on May 29 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. It is a great opportunity to support local farmers and learn some valuable farm and garden techniques. There will be over 40 vendors of fresh produce, nursery plants and crafts. There will be educational presentations on everything from making goat cheese with Dick Threlfall and grafting fruit trees by Ty McDonald, UH-CTAHR to Fruit Trees of the Future by Brian Lievens of the Hawaii Tropical Fruit Growers Association. The day will be vibrating with music, entertainment and Hawaiian cultural activities. For further information, contact Lori Beach at info@hamakuaharvest.org or Julia at (203)903-1696.
Now let’s explore ways you can make your gardening experience more enjoyable. Meteorologists are forecasting a diminishing El Nino going to neutral conditions this summer and La Nina conditions are likely this fall meaning dry weather will persist for much of Hawaii. When weather conditions are dry, it is a good time to consider ways to conserve water. Organic material is essential to good soil. Decomposed organic matter helps increase water and nutrient holding capacity of the soil. Un rotted material like leaves and clippings used as surface mulch can help conserve moisture and keep weeds under control. Nematodes, those little microscopic worms that feed on your roots, will do less damage in a high organic soil. Organic matter may also increase the minor element and microbiological activity of your soil.
For those reasons, it is vital to save your grass clippings and leaves. They are like money in the bank. You can store these materials in a corner of the garden.
Decay of plant material deposited in a compost pile can be hastened through the use of fertilizer and manures.
For each bushel of leaves or grass clippings, add two cups of balanced fertilizer (composed of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium) and one cup crushed coral, dolomite or hydrated lime.
Build the compost pile in layer-cake method, a layer of plant material 6 inches deep. Continue until the pile is 4 feet high or so.
After the pile shows signs that decay is well under way, usually four to five weeks, mix the pile by turning it over. A pitchfork would come in handy at this point. The compost is ready to use in about three months. It is an excellent material to mix with soil for vegetable gardens and new plantings.
Anthuriums especially thrive on compost. They love that high organic, well-aerated mix with good water retention capability, yet good drainage. A good mix needs to be able to anchor the roots and stem so that the plant will not topple over as it grows upward yet provide sufficient moisture, nutrients, and aeration to the plant. Cinder or crushed rock added to composted wood shavings, macadamia nut shells, or peat or tree bark will serve to better anchor the roots.
Even with composting and mulching, you will still need to fertilize your garden.
Some Hawaiian soils are very young and low in nutrients. Larger amounts of fertilizer are needed for fast growing plants and lawn grasses, than where soils are older and better developed.
The soil is not only lacking in the primary elements, such as nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, but it is deficient in the secondary elements like calcium and magnesium. Then there are those “minor elements” such as manganese, iron, copper, zinc, and boron. Even if all elements required are there, they may not be available because of high alkalinity or very acidic soils.
When plants are grown in these mineral deficient soils and fertilized with ordinary plant foods, they often develop various deficiencies.
Several years ago, plant doctors studied these deficiencies and learned not only how to recognize the affected plants, but how they could be corrected by applying the minerals in which the plant was deficient.
But what average gardener has the training that enables him to recognize deficiency symptoms in plants?
To overcome this problem, the “nutritional spray” was developed. It is a mixture that contains about all of the minerals in which a plant can be deficient. This is especially effective with alkaline that are not easily neutralized.
At first it was necessary to add lime in order to neutralize these solutions but now garden stores have mixes that require no lime.
Some plants are more subject to mineral deficiencies than are other plants. Especially vulnerable to mineral deficiencies such as dieback, mottled-leaf, small-leaf and yellow-leaf are hibiscus, gardenia, mock orange, ixora, mango, avocado, macadamia, coffee and citrus.
Two to three times a year is usually enough to apply a nutritional spray.
Commercial growers apply the nutritional spray as a “preventive measure.” It is easier to prevent deficiencies than to correct them.
In new gardens, it may be necessary to apply a nutritional spray about every three months during the first year in order to keep ahead of deficiencies.
Along with the nutritional spray, it is a good idea to use a soil application of the minor elements. Magnesium, iron and zinc are the most important elements, but occasionally we find plants with boron, manganese, copper and other “trace” element deficiencies. There are several “shot gun” combinations available at your supply store. Certain plants require larger amounts of various elements than other plants. As you get acquainted with our tropicals, you will find for example that iron is especially important on ixoras, hibiscus, azaleas, and gardenias or that magnesium keeps leaves of coconut and areca palms from getting orange-colored and dying prematurely. Zinc is the vital element in growing queen palms, royal palms and palms in the date group. Howea or kentia palms and our native pritchardia or loulu palms suffer from a twisting distorted growth patterns due to boron deficiency.
Increasing your soil organic matter and using a “shot gun” treatment of trace elements as a spray or soil application or both will keep your plants from having these deficiencies under most conditions. Remember to follow directions on the label. Too much of the important plant nutrient materials can be as bad as than too little.
If in doubt about your soil type and pH, you may have your soil tested. This information is supplied by the University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources. For further information on soils and testing contact the CTAHR office near you.