Ilex Gardener

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since Nov 13, 2011
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Recent posts by Ilex Gardener

Alder is right, I've planted several hundred of those 2 months ago.
11 years ago
Creeping thyme, oregano, marjoram
12 years ago
One of the biggest problems you'll have is that you are in the humid SE.

I grow several citrus var in SC and have the same problem they do in Florida. In places that are really humid, oranges have lots of juice and thin vesicle walls; making them a very messy fruit to peel.

Oranges meant to be hand fruit are grown in California. Florida oranges end up in orange juice.

If you decide to keep the oranges, consider what processed goods you could produce, juices, jams. fruit leather.
12 years ago
This is also something I'm interested in, though I'm having the toughest time finding a supplier.

Does anyone know where I could source some helix pomatia?
12 years ago
Removing it will do more harm to the tree than leaving them in.

They have already begun the process of healing around the screws. If you remove them you will be exposing the interior of the tree to insects and infections.

Leave them in, they're not going to hurt it anymore than they have.

Besides, take them out, he'll just stick them in another tree.
12 years ago
Hey Jeanie I also live in the midlands of SC. I'm starting to see more and more of us on here. Glad to hear that you had some success. How did your JA perform, did they make it through the summer? This was such a bad one, going weeks without rain.

Saybian, nothing noticed, but I only ate one tuber just to give it a try. I don't think I consumed enough to honestly answer that question. Also, as a 26 yo American male, I already produce copious amounts of flatulence, I wouldn't be able to tell if I was producing more than normal.
12 years ago
After much deliberation, I decided to order some Jerusalem Artichokes. The description from Oikos said these were the best variety they had for baking.

They arrived last week, very stout, thin skinned, not too many knobs. They look like fat radishes. I have them in a little dirt in my pantry, waiting for next spring to plant, however........

I had to try one.

I picked out the ugliest and chopped it into steak fries and sprayed a little pam on the pan and on them, then salted and baked for 20 minutes @ 325 F.

Very surprised how potato like they tasted. I would actually go so far as to say that potatoes taste like them. the taste was like a russet potato x 10. I don't know how else to describe it, tasted like a very strongly potato flavored potato.

I was worried it was going to be sweet or taste like a water chestnut, not at all.



Have y'all tried any of the other commercially available JA varieties, how do they taste?
12 years ago

John Polk wrote:The article points out the fallacy of our idiotic policy of 'trading food for fuel' (aka biofuel).



For the last decade the High Fructose industry has been pushing the false notion that corn based ethanol removes corn from the food supply.

1) the corn used for ethanol is field and dent corn, used as fodder for animals. Its not the sweet corn that is bound for food markets.

2) Ethanol is created when yeast eat sugar and produce alcohols. Yeast eats simple sugars, it does not break down cellulose, it does not break down complex carbohydrates or proteins.

3) When you make ethanol, you cook the corn, remove the sugars, and then dry the corn so you can

SELL it as FOOD for LIVESTOCK.

4) Corn that has been processed through an ethanol plant is higher in protein/pound and easier for animals to digest.

5) The real culprits in the rising price of corn are:

a) The High Fructose Corn Syrup industry, which does use sweet corn that would otherwise end up on your table, turning TONS x 10 of corn into gallons of HFC syrup.

b) The steadily increasing price the gas. Corn, with the exception of mirai, being exclusively planted, cultivated and picked mechanically is a very fuel intensive crop. Not to mention the fact that most mechanical planters are very large gas guzzlers; the International Harvester, the industry standard and workhorse, gets less than 3 miles/gallon.

c) The most insidious reason resides halfway round the world in the royal house of Saud, who have been buying up both corn futures and short options on corn.

When you buy futures you're telling the stock market that you believe that the price is going to rise and you want to buy it cheaper early. In agriculture, buying early usually means you think the crop will fail this year, therefore increasing the price by cutting supply.

When you buy short options, you're literally betting with a broker that the futures price is going to drop due the a failure in the industry, and that you will be able to buy futures cheaper later.

In agriculture, buying short usually means you believe that crop will fail this year.

Both these figures are very high now, making to corn industry seem VERY unstable, increasing the amount of speculators who will also follow the big players and want to make profit.

Even when we have good years, the amount of speculators has caused an unnaturally high price.

In bad years like this one, the people who bought short options profit, further increasing the price of an already catastrophically wounded industry.

But the worst part of these figures is that when they are as high as they are now, bankers are very unlikely to give out loans.

The only loans farmers can get now, most of whom depend on loans to buy seed, fuel for the season, and enough that they can live on till the first harvest, are hard to get and have unnaturally high interest rates, increasing the costs to the farmer and plum putting many out of business.

Not to mention how Monsanto buffalo farmers into buying their genetics, which I'm sure most of you are aware of and my hands are too tired to go into their despicable practices.

I hope this was concise, feel free to ask me any questions if you want to elaborate on something I didn't fully explain.

12 years ago
Very similar; in fact, both potato onions and shallots have the Latin name Allium cepa var. aggregatum.

The only difference being that the former can swell to a diameter between 7.5-10 cm
12 years ago