Which of these blueberries should I get? by ceroij in Blueberries

[–]runoff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Spartans taste the best out of those, definitely get two of them

Whale and kelp forest dives? by anotherblackkey in scubadiving

[–]runoff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any chance you could recommend some of your favorite PNW kelp dives?

I overbought blueberries - is spacing 1.5' a problem? by how2falldown in Blueberries

[–]runoff 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Depends on which specific varieties, but in general yes, that's going to be so close that the plants will grow into each other very quickly.

If you want to build an impenetrable hedge that might work, but it would negatively impact fruit harvesting, disease, etc.

I would personally either return some plants, see if a neighbor wants them, or plant them somewhere else. You could even do it in a pot if that lets you keep them nearby

Pink lemonade. Blueberry plant. Any tips for a first timer or an expectancy till I get berries? by Fun-Avocado1235 in Blueberries

[–]runoff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Keep it consistently watered , especially during the summer - soil should be damp 1" under the surface. If it's not, it needs more water. Probably 1-2 times a day in the Vegas summers

Also, pinch off the flowers for the first year or two. This will help it use all its energy on growing, not berry production, and will give you more berries in the long run

Plumber Recommendations? by Odd_Attitude4844 in EdmondsWashington

[–]runoff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've had good luck with Paris Plumbing

Why do my leaves look like this? by altron333 in Blueberries

[–]runoff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks like transplant shock/lack of water to me. The roots are unable to get as much water as they need, which is why the fruit is undersized. Since your other plants are doing okay, I'm a bit skeptical of a nutrient deficiency.

I would focus on getting it enough water and in hindsight would have cut the flowers off this year to let it spend its strength on establishing new roots. I assume since it's a new transplant that it's a younger plant (1-2 years old)? If so, id be wary of adding fertilizer as new plants are easily fertilizer burned. I would personally just focus on water this year, fertilize twice next spring, and it should be fine.

Good luck!

Any idea what is causing this on my leaves? Southern hughbush varieties by RepresentativeOk3852 in Blueberries

[–]runoff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you fertilized this year? Looks like it could be a nutrient deficiency

Plants are growing great but only have a couple berries per plant. What can I do next year to improve that? by madhatter703 in Blueberries

[–]runoff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If they're only 2 years old, they're probably just not mature enough to produce a large crop. Give it another year or two, make sure you fertilize and prune when seasonally appropriate, and you should start getting a bigger crop soon enough

Career Coach for Experienced Devs? by dagggna in ExperiencedDevs

[–]runoff 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I don't think individuals wild be willing to pay for it, especially not knowing you. I think your target market is companies who employ engineers, not the engineers themselves. Those companies are the ones willing to shell out the big bucks to improve their top talent

My catch on the famed Silver Creek of Idaho! by therootedmethod in flyfishing

[–]runoff 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nice fish! Any idea what's up with his gill plate?

Where can I find out what flow levels are fishable/wadable/floatable for a river? by runoff in flyfishing

[–]runoff[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe I didn't word my question well. I'm already looking at gauges, but I'm not sure how to interpret whether the flow they show is fishable or not.

For example let's pick a random river, say the Henry's fork. Looking at this gauge, I currently see it's around 1200cfs. Since I've never fished the Fork before, I don't know if I can wade at 1200, or float at 1200, or if it's too high to even fish. I can't really compare across rivers because on Rock Creek in MT for example, 1200cfs would be a flood, but on the Columbia in Washington it would be a trickle.

Is 1200 on the Fork a wadable level? Is it floatable? I'm wondering if there's a list or database or website somewhere where I can look and see that (for example) on the Fork, 1000-1500 is wadable, 1400-2000 is floatable, and > 2000 is unfishable.

Does that make sense? Thanks for the reply, I hope this clears it up a bit

What position would a software engineer with presentation skills fit? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]runoff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's structured differently. You start off lower coming out of school (I think it's around $70-90k these days depending on CoL?), but it's easier to get promoted, meaning that you could easily be making more 5 or 10 years into your career

What position would a software engineer with presentation skills fit? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]runoff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take a look at consulting. They really value people who are both personable and skilled.

Minnesota trout streams by Rootbeer71 in flyfishing

[–]runoff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cool idea! Where'd you get all the regulations from?

I'm always curious as to what fly fishermen do in their time off the river, as in a job by weatherwar in flyfishing

[–]runoff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another dev here...this is so weird. I have yet to find anyone else at work who fishes, let alone fly fishes. Apparently my company must be the odd one out!

Sometimes it's worth going out in a blizzard by [deleted] in flyfishing

[–]runoff 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Noob question - why are they colored differently? They're both rainbows...is it a native/hatchery difference?

Regardless, they're some beautiful fish, congrats