sbarnhardt
Mame
I've been working on a building myself a box arrangement to winter my plants in. It's 4ft X 5ft out of 2X10's. It's not all that large but it's large enough for my purposes at this point.
I'm working on a hoop system using pex pipe over which I can roll plastic if I need it to create sort of a "mini greenhouse so to speak. Our NC zone 7b winters are sometimes cold and sometimes not. But that's not the reason for my question today.
My thoughts are turning to what I'm going to use to bed the roots with. It seems most folks talk about using pine bark. At least the ones I've had the fortune to run across. My question is, as the title says, to use, or not use, pine needles to bed the pots/roots with. It just seems it would be easier to work with and maybe a bit cheaper, although I've managed to spend more on this "project" already than I thought I would. So I'm throwning this out to you learned folks. Has anyone used pine needles as opposed to pine bark? Is there an overpowering reason one way or the other for one over the other? Any other thoughts??
Thanks
Barney
North Carolina Zone 7b
I'm working on a hoop system using pex pipe over which I can roll plastic if I need it to create sort of a "mini greenhouse so to speak. Our NC zone 7b winters are sometimes cold and sometimes not. But that's not the reason for my question today.
My thoughts are turning to what I'm going to use to bed the roots with. It seems most folks talk about using pine bark. At least the ones I've had the fortune to run across. My question is, as the title says, to use, or not use, pine needles to bed the pots/roots with. It just seems it would be easier to work with and maybe a bit cheaper, although I've managed to spend more on this "project" already than I thought I would. So I'm throwning this out to you learned folks. Has anyone used pine needles as opposed to pine bark? Is there an overpowering reason one way or the other for one over the other? Any other thoughts??
Thanks
Barney
North Carolina Zone 7b