Matt McSpadden wrote:I want to provide a screen for some privacy between the road and the property. In our area, this needs to be at least 30ft from the center of the road or it might get cut. This leaves that spot between the break and the road. What would you plant there to make the space be useful?
It would be good if it could attract birds, bugs, butterflies and similar for either food or habitat (with the knowledge that it might get mowed a couple times a year.
It needs to regrow because the town might mow it a couple times a year.
I don't plan to eat anything from that side due to all potential for runoff from the road.
It needs to be hearty because of all the salt that comes off the road in the winter.
The spot is about 500 feet long, so it needs to be affordable to do for a long stretch.
Any ideas?
Melissa Ferrin wrote:Bumping up this old thread because I am a nopal evangelist!
Paul loves sunchokes because, apparently, you can just dig them up and eat them whenever, even after a freeze. Apparently it's even better, after a freeze?
I wouldn't know as I live in a place with only an occasional frost and certainly no ground freezes.
Even if you do get a freeze, there are varieties that peole say can come back after going dormant, or you could try what my grandma used to do with her roses in northern Iowa, cut back to 10 inches above the ground, cover with an old styrofoam cooler, put a bick on top, then pile hay all around.
Because nopales, with a bit of watering, can produce tasty food continuously, or can live through dry spells and only produce their tasty food when it rains.
Riona Abhainn wrote:Plants I've gotten to grow from grocery store food:
potatoes, mini-white pumpkins.
Seeds I've tried which didn't work:
cantalope once, bell peppers once, I'd try both again, in fact I'm about to plant bell pepper seeds again to try, but I think like William of Ohio said they are picked too early to go to the store so the seeds don't mature. I'll try anything twice in the garden though.
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.