SKIP books, get 'em while they're hot!!! Skills to Inherit Property
Mike Haasl wrote:Welcome Mari! Come up north, it gets cheaper the farther you go
Welcome to the site, there are lots of resources here including many posts on things like "where should I buy land?"
With appropriate microbes, minerals and organic matter, there is no need for pesticides or herbicides.
growing food and medicine, keeping chickens, heating with wood, learning the land
https://mywildwisconsin.org
Marisa Lee wrote:Hi, Mari! I'm new & in Wisconsin, too! I am way up north on the Bayfield peninsula.
What do you like to grow? I'm relatively new to gardening, but learning more each year. I start some seeds indoors, and I've been scheming lately on how a gal can put up a greenhouse inexpensively. Do you do anything to extend your growing season (greenhouse, cold frames, those hoops/tunnels...)? How do you preserve your harvest, or do you prefer to eat it all fresh and share the excess?
If you had more space, what would you add? I mean, would you expand your gardening efforts, or are there other things you want to do by having more land?
SKIP books, get 'em while they're hot!!! Skills to Inherit Property
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
Mari Henry wrote:
Marisa Lee wrote:Hi, Mari! I'm new & in Wisconsin, too! I am way up north on the Bayfield peninsula.
What do you like to grow? I'm relatively new to gardening, but learning more each year. I start some seeds indoors, and I've been scheming lately on how a gal can put up a greenhouse inexpensively. Do you do anything to extend your growing season (greenhouse, cold frames, those hoops/tunnels...)? How do you preserve your harvest, or do you prefer to eat it all fresh and share the excess?
If you had more space, what would you add? I mean, would you expand your gardening efforts, or are there other things you want to do by having more land?
Hi Marisa!!! Bayfield area is very pretty. I love our Great Lakes, don't you? Lake Superior is lovely, but I am partial and more familiar with Lake Michigan. I live in south central Wisconsin in a small town with a very small yard lol.
I keep my gardening really simple as I don't have a lot of space either inside or outside. I used to start seeds in a sunny window, but I splurged this year and bought a shelving greenhouse thing (it is small) with grow lights and a few heat mats to start seeds inside. It is going ok so far. I don't really have room for a greenhouse outside, but I did experiment with some plastic sheeting and stakes in 2 places outside about 2 feet area. The first one blew down right away lol, live and learn. The other I put up against my house and it seems to be holding up. Not sure what is under it as I haven't checked is a few months and it was covered with snow. There are lots of videos about how to build cold frames or places to buy them and you put them together.
I do a lot of canning. Mostly tomatoes, and sauce. Other stuff I freeze. Or I buy it at a farmers market and freeze it. I keep it really simple. I also grow sprouts in the house for greens over the winter. And eat frozen and dried fruits, which are a real treat. I have heard people like using a pressure canner, but I have not trued it yet. I just use the old fashioned water bath.
I like to grow and use herbs for tea and in my food. I think it is fun. I read a lot about herbal remedies as I think it is interesting.
growing food and medicine, keeping chickens, heating with wood, learning the land
https://mywildwisconsin.org
Mike Haasl wrote:Wow, lots of questions there. I'll answer a couple...
I grow salad stuff, carrots, beets, onions, cabbage, broccoli, kale, brussel sprouts, peas, beans, squash, cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, potatoes, sweet potatoes, garlic and a few other things. You might be a tad warmer depending on where you are on the peninsula.
Preserving is a fair bit of root cellaring along with some canning, drying and freezing.
growing food and medicine, keeping chickens, heating with wood, learning the land
https://mywildwisconsin.org
Mike Barkley wrote:Welcome to permies Mari.
Y'all might want to try growing kohlrabi. The veggie that looks like Sputnik. I grew some in MN one year, in nothing but very well composted cow manure & hay, and they were amazing. Almost volleyball size & still very tender & juicy. I think the climate is just about perfect for them around there. That same year I grew the things on Mike's list except sweet potatoes & Brussels sprouts. Everything did quite well. Some of the credit goes to that wonderful compost but the kohlrabi was WOW compared to the other plants.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohlrabi
growing food and medicine, keeping chickens, heating with wood, learning the land
https://mywildwisconsin.org
SKIP books, get 'em while they're hot!!! Skills to Inherit Property
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
A.J. in Wisconsin
All that thinking. Doesn't it hurt? What do you think about this tiny ad?
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