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#1 |
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Anyone growing their own? I have two Cascade that are a year old. I've also got 2 Nugget and 2 Willamette going into the ground this spring. I noticed we have a nice enclave of home brewers and was wondering who has taken the plunge into growing the vine.
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#2 |
BeerHunter
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I have always wanted to, but I have tons of trees all around my house that blocks out the sun so I really dont have a place to grow them.
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I Brew the Beer I Drink |
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#3 |
following the whiterabbit
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Sounds like a cool idea, how do you do it? How hard is it? How hardy are the plants? What growing zones? you know all that stuff.
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#5 | |
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Once you get your rhizome you plant it horizontally six inches deep in the ground. They like good drainage so some growers will plant them in mounds aprox. 8 inches tall. The rhizome will first try to establish a nice root system, so proper watering during the beginning of the first season is essential. Once a root system is established a few shoots will sprout up. Because its a vine plant you need a proper trellis system in place to train the young shoots. By proper I mean something at least 12 to 16 feet tall. Hops can grow well over 20 feet, easily, and there are usually 3 to 8 shoots per plant. As I said before they grow like a weed so they require very little fertilizer; in fact I would recommend none at all unless its organic. This stuff is going into your beer after all. I use 4X4X16 posts connected by a single 3/8 inch wire at the top; the posts are aprox 12 feet apart. I use a product called "Hop Twine" which is essentially coconut fiber made into twine somewhere in India. I take the twine and attach it to the overhead wire and run it down to the ground and tie it to a stake near the the plant. I do this twice to create a V-shape twine trellis for each plant. In the late spring as the hop vines get to be about 6 to 12 inches tall they want to start climbing something so I train the vines onto the twine. They train real easy and after a day or two the vines know what to do. Come harvest time, which for me in SE Michigan is about mid September (changes with hop variety, and location) I cut the vines close to the ground and then cut the twine holding them to the main wire. I take each vine separately and remove the hop cones. Then I dry the hops in homemade dry box. Which is essentially a box 3 foot tall and one foot wide with 4 layers of screens; its sealed p except a round hole cut out to fit a hair dryer in the top. Turn the hair dryer on medium and in a little bit you have home grown hops dried and ready for brewing. I know this post would be a much better with pictures but I didn't take any of last years crop. This year, I will take photos from the very beginning of building the hop yard and trellis to harvest and dry time and have a sort of running journal of my hop garden. Brewing with your own hops is one hell of a rewarding experience. Not only did you make your own beer but you did it with ingredients you grew. It could just be my German background, but that just feels bada$$ to me ![]() |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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#10 |
Mr. Charisma
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I used to........but now I live in South Florida. It has it's benefits, but hop growing is not one of them.
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#11 | |
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Keep mind, millage may very, my typical batch and your typical batch are likely to be two very separate things. Also, I used them in a different ways for every batch. For instance, I dry hopped a pale ale, I used some for bittering , some for aroma, etc. I wanted to get the feel for their alpha acid content. |
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#12 |
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Yeah, I would be surprised if you could harvest a good crop that far south. Its a lot of work in the spring and at harvest but overall they're a nice plant to have for any home-brewer's garden.
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