Warning, image heavy post coming up
I split the field in half and planted one half (that was full of goutweed rhizomes) with potatoes. Arran victory, Golden Wonder, Sarpo Mira and Mayan Twilight.
These were the winners in my last years trial of potato varieties for taste, except for Sarpo, which is sort of meh, but when everything else succumbed to blight, it was totally unaffected. So it's a fail-safe in case of bad blight this year.
There was a bit of damage from feral pigs, but thankfully they haven't come back
Speaking of potatoes, here is another field, this one has a few hundred of plants started from tps.
There's quite a a bit of damage from Colorado beetle. At first I picked them off, but then decided to leave them be. This way I'm selecting for plants that can survive the pest pressure.
I noticed that the beetles generally prefer diploid potatoes with their smaller/thinner leaves.
The other half (full of couch grass) was delegated to my flint corn
landrace. The germination was poor, so it's very patchy.
It has Abenaki flint, Ruby cascade red and gold, and a couple of dozen varieties from a german seedbank.
As expected, the genebank corn is probably severely inbred and very weak. Some are distorted, some are starting to tassel at foot long, some are just runts.
The fact that I'm not able to irrigate this field and this summer is extremely dry so far hasn't helped one bit.
Oh well, I guess any survivors will be tough ones.
My other corns are doing much better.
Here's sweet corn - mix of Lofthouse astronomy and a
local variety called Zizma (very tasty)
And here's a mix of Lofthouse grain corn and Painted mountain. I selected the most floury kernels for this field using salt
water to seperate the flinty ones.
Beautiful tassels.
Some ears are starting to silk.
At the edges of the field I planted many varieties of buttercup and other smallish maxima squashes. The germination was horrible - less than half came up.
When soil was moist it was too cold for them to germinate, and when it warmed up, it was very fast and the soil became too dry.
Some of Lofthouse buttercups. These seem to be doing best out of all I had planted.
As you can tell, I'm not doing a great job with weeding. Let's just say it's part of the selection process for more resilient plants
Here's Lofthouse wheat landrace, (as you can tell I'm really liking the genetics from Joseph, even if not everything survives, the fact that he has a similarly short season as I do and diverse genetics in his seeds make them a great starting point for my garden.
Sown in fall and about 60~70 % of the plants survived our last -25C winter. For now I'm just doing seed increase.