Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Cargo bikes are cool
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Cargo bikes are cool
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Pearl Sutton wrote:Eating the seeds depends on how small you are willing to crack. I have some seeds that are just huge, the Turban had small ones, not much to them. All are edible, it's a matter of how much work you want to put into them.
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Michael Cox wrote:How do you store them to keep them good?
Cargo bikes are cool
Michael Cox wrote:
Do you know any particularly good squash for harvesting seeds for eating? Mine last year were large, but had thick husks.
Joseph Lofthouse's excellent post on Identifying squash: https://permies.com/t/46560/Maxima-Moschata-Pepo#371682
And the better version on his web site: http://garden.lofthouse.com/how-to-identify-squash.phtml#grouped
10-15 degrees Centigrade = 50-60 degrees Fahrenheit
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Michael Cox wrote:
Do you know any particularly good squash for harvesting seeds for eating? Mine last year were large, but had thick husks.
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
Kate Medland wrote:I'm curious about Jack-o-lanterns. I'd always been told they were not pleasant to eat, but I'm really not sure why.
Next year will be a squash/ pumpkin bonanza at our place! We are going to use them to protect our tree saplings. The prickles on them helped with 3 Sister Gardens this season, and we'd like to experiment.
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
If it survives in my garden, it was meant to live!
BTK = Bacillus thuringiensis kurstaki
$10.00 is a donation. $1,000 is an investment, $1,000,000 is a purchase.
Pearl Sutton wrote:If freezer is an option, cooked and frozen takes up less space. I take my cooked chunks, pack them into 2 inch cupcake pans, freeze them, take them out of the pans, and put them into bags neatly stacked like LifeSavers. They take up much less space after cooking, and then you can just grab a chunk or two out of the freezer as needed. We call those "Pucks" and throw pucks into all kinds of foods, including our blended green shakes we like.
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
cindyl541
Kate Medland wrote:I'm curious about Jack-o-lanterns. I'd always been told they were not pleasant to eat, but I'm really not sure why.
Next year will be a squash/ pumpkin bonanza at our place! We are going to use them to protect our tree saplings. The prickles on them helped with 3 Sister Gardens this season, and we'd like to experiment.
$10.00 is a donation. $1,000 is an investment, $1,000,000 is a purchase.
craig howard wrote:I had problems with squash borers.
It was posted on here to wait until after June to plant them
so I planted them in pots and waited until June was over to put them in the ground.
About a dozen made it
.
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Cindy Baker wrote:This is a great thread! Hi Pearl! This happened on the small triangle of rock by my driveway. I failed to move my Jack-o-lantern and small white decorative pumpkins last year and got this surprise. I didn't think orange and white could create green and yellow. Should I try cooking them? Can they be poisoned by nearby toxic plants? Is it possible that the squash fairy played a trick on me and planted some wonderful old heirloom?
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote:
craig howard wrote:I had problems with squash borers.
It was posted on here to wait until after June to plant them
so I planted them in pots and waited until June was over to put them in the ground.
About a dozen made it
.
Me too, and it is the first year ever that I have squash borers. My whole crop was ruined. This year, I planted it in a sheet of plastic with holes. I don't know if that had an effect. Below is the best site I found about how to deal with these pests: since they go down about 2" in the ground over the winter, I may be tilling lightly to see if I can kill them, otherwise, since the moths that emerge in June-July are good flyers, nowhere in my garden would be safe. You stated that about a dozen made it. Plants or squash? Do you think maybe it was just a bad year? I guess, once the soil is infected, it may not help to plant them later. Besides, I'm in zone 4b, so the season is short enough that I can't play very much with the calendar.
BT might be good to kill the borer in the Fall, when it is in the ground, outside of the squash, but once the moth emerges, we are in for another round of these pests. Good luck to you.
https://extension.umn.edu/yard-and-garden-insects/squash-vine-borers
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$10.00 is a donation. $1,000 is an investment, $1,000,000 is a purchase.
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
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Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Almond Thompson wrote: I'm open to other suggestions.
Trying to achieve self-reliance on a tiny suburban plot: http://gardenofgaladriel.blogspot.com
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
Pearl Sutton wrote:Eating the seeds depends on how small you are willing to crack. I have some seeds that are just huge, the Turban had small ones, not much to them. All are edible, it's a matter of how much work you want to put into them.
R. Han wrote:
Pearl Sutton wrote:Eating the seeds depends on how small you are willing to crack. I have some seeds that are just huge, the Turban had small ones, not much to them. All are edible, it's a matter of how much work you want to put into them.
Really all of them? Also the seeds of bitter tasting cucurbitae, whose flesh is poisonous to us?
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
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