Posted on 05/21/2022 6:57:35 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
I’ll have to look at this. I like pesto on Italian bread and pasta, but unless you have a garden it’s expensive to make from scratch. Kale is relatively cheap - and healthy.
We planted a Stone Pine about a decade ago, for the pine nuts. Seeing as it's the slowest growing pine tree on the planet, we should have some pine nuts in 100 years or so, LOL!
You turned me on to Shishito peppers and I turned you on to kale. You can plant it in a 5 gallon bucket if you need to and it can tolerate some shade. It's better after a frost in the fall, IMHO.
This season I am growing 'Dinosaur' Kale and ''Prism' Kale:
One of the reasons I avoided kale or spinach is I was advised by my doc years ago. They are both high in vitamin K and I have been prone to dvt’s and blood clots. I am on a blood thinner now probably forever, so I figure it’s OK to eat now. Got my seeds at the local hardware - variety is Red Russian. Can you save seeds from kale?
“Can you save seeds from kale?”
You and I don’t have a long enough growing season to get them to go to flower and set seed in one season. If you cover them and let them overwinter, or we get a big dump of insulating SNOW before we get the frigid temps, they’ll bloom in the spring if they make it.
Mine overwintered year before last, and they did go to flower, so I left them alone so the pollinators could enjoy the flowers, but then I pulled them because they were taking up valuable real estate in the garden.
“How to Save Kale Seed (and Why I Probably Won’t Do It Again)”
https://rootsandboots.com/how-to-save-kale-seed-and-why-i-probably-wont-do-it-again/
The Victory Garden.
Don’t just Consume, Produce. Our parents did it, and so can we.
“If people let government decide which food they eat and medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny”
Thomas Jefferson
Good to know thanks. Just planted them.
See the previous discussion regarding seed viability. You do not get as many seeds as you do from Johnnies or Territorial, but you can stock up. (How many tomatoes will be be growing??)
Seeds 'n Such To:Pete (@ Shawnee Mission)
https://seedsnsuch.com
"Celebrate Memorial Day with 35% off!
You read that right. Our 35% off sale is continuing for just a few more days. Make sure to stock up on fantastic seeds at a great price. Just use code 2022THANKS at checkout to get your discount!"
It’s 67 degrees and raining yet again here in Ctrl MO. Lettuce victory is mine.
Don't plant this, at least if you expect any pine nuts for you or your great grandchildren!
https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?taxonid=284962&isprofile=0&cv=5
Common Name: lacebark pine
Type: Needled evergreen
Family: Pinaceae
Native Range: Central and northern China
Zone: 4 to 8
Pinus bungeana
When young, they have mottled bark. After 200 years or so they turn all white. There are 800 year old trees at Chinese Temples.
https://www.conifers.org/pi/Pinus_bungeana.php
NW China (Silba 1986). Hardy to Zone 5 (cold hardiness limit between -28.8°C and -23.3°C) (Bannister and Neuner 2001).
"[I]t was first seen by Dr. Bunge near [Beijing] in 1831. It was subsequently found in the mountains of Central China by Wilson, and is cultivated by the Chinese in the vicinity of temples and cemeteries. It grows naturally amongst limestone rocks, with widely spreading roots and branches" (Dallimore et al. 1967)."
The collector of this pine Professor Bunge had a hard time collecting seeds to propogate...everytime a pine cone fell, the locals would quickly try to grab it for the pine nuts!
Lettuce! It almost wilted away during that 90 degree plus stretch! ( 66degrees F & More rain coming your way!)
“Lettuce victory is mine.”
We’ve got cooler temps again and mid-60’s today and a FULL 1/2” of rain. Lovely, slow, SOAKING rain! And no wind tearing apart my greenhouse! And tornadoes southeast of us, but not on us! Yay!
However, we may win this Battle, but still lose the War. Let’s not get too cocky! Plenty of destructive bugs, blight, drought, raccoons, deer, rabbits and Tomato Hornworms ahead. ;)
We are in the woods and gave always encouraged the insect eating birds. We can watch them foraging in the garden for worms and bugs. They are very effective. Even just a clean birdbath in your garden will help.
Our place is a bird haven - very little bug damage to anything and lots of ‘good’ bugs to keep things in check.
I was just speaking in general terms of what lies ahead of us this season. ;)
Garden Thread Cross-Ping:
This 700-Year-Old Farming Technique Can Make Super Fertile Soil:
https://freerepublic.com/focus/chat/4066537/posts?page=1
5/27/22 after rainy weather
Sunny now and will quickly be going from cloudy, 60-70 by day to sunny, 80-90 by day. Maters and peppers will be jumping up with that weather and I better start eating leaf lettuce/greens. One of my komatsuna plants close to camera in that middle row has a yellow flower. I'll be planting those earlier from now on. Might let that one go to seed and quickly start eating the outer leaves on the rest to hopefully slow them down.
Are vidalia onions a good storage onion?
Found an interesting tip on a community fb page.
“Painting bright red rocks and setting them out amongst your strawberry plants before they are ready will help protect them from birds. The birds learn that they can’t eat the bright red rocks so when the strawberries ripen they don’t draw the birds attention. “
The photo posted showed small red rocks that almost looked like strawberry slices set around the plants. Clever!
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