Anne Miller wrote:If I wanted to start a food forest from what I could get at the grocery store I would start with fruit that will grow in my area.
A lot of items from the grocery store will regrow though these are not likely candidates due to a small yield. Like onions, celery and carrots.
”Katya Zaimov wrote:
“I think the foliage and the green beans will be the parts we eat, with the dried beans being seed for the next year and a fall back food source
Riona Abhainn wrote: Last year I tried planting in late April (zone 8b) and nothing happened, it might have been because I was using seeds from grocery store peppers, both javanero and seranos.
I'll try again this year. I like trying something twice before giving up on it, in this case "it" being those seeds saved from grocery peppers.
Genevieve Lisa Pearson Coleman wrote:Something nobody ever mentioned to me, but which has been very useful on several occasions, is to have a secondary pen/holding area nearby - so, an area for ill/injured birds and plan an area next to the birds you already have for 'new' additions. I have found that over the years birds die and you want to build up your stock - but when you introduce new birds to your original flock, they can be aggressive, so time spent next to each other, but with a fence between, can help the old birds get used to the new birds. After about a week or so, they usually have got used to the newcomers and can join without getting pecked on.
Juan Roble wrote:Hi!.
I’ve also been thinking about protecting the hive in winter from the outside, using insulating panels like an outer shell or box around the hive. I’m not sure whether this would actually make things more comfortable for the bees, but I suspect that reducing some of the cold exposure might lower their winter stress.
Where my land is, the cold is usually not too extreme, but temperatures can still drop to -12°C (around 10.4°F).