paul wheaton wrote:I think it is good to note which things get chomped by deer, but I also think that getting chomped by deer does not excludesit from "the top 3".
I have a fenced area. And a lot of unfenced area. And a LOT of deer pressure.
The deer eventually chomp the kale and the sunchokes. But I can still get a big kale harvest before they chomp it. And the sunchokes tolerate some chomping late in the season. So kale is mostly grown in the fenced area.
The deer do not chomp the onions.
Everybody is going to have different zones and challenges. Some people have zero deer problems.
There are thousands of gardening books where people talk about growing gardens and there is zero mention of deer.
And thousands of gardening books growing stuff that will not grow in a tropical climate and they have zero mention of citrus, bananas, etc.
I mention all this because I appreciate the discussion of challenges ("grow in a fenced area" or "the deer don't seem to want it") but some of the wording seems dark to me because it seems to discourage anybody trying due to challenges.
paul wheaton wrote:
Anne Miller wrote:I have not grown sunchokes because some folks say they cause gas.
I have heard the same thing. And I have learned three very important things:
THING-1: I have eaten sunchokes about 50 times and had gas only once. But it was sooooo good, I ate way, way, way more than i should have.
THING-2: my understanding is that you need to build up the ability to thoroughly digest sunchokes. Start small.
THING-3: apparently, if you harvest after the first hard frost, there will be less digestive issues.
Here's a thing? Ferment sunchokes so they're partially digested prior to consumption to reduce gas.
How to Ferment Jerusalem Artichokes - The Backyard Larder https://backyardlarder.co.uk/2020/12/how-to-ferment-jerusalem-artichokes/
Jordan Johnston wrote:looking for anyone in canada with meader persimmon and or any other 90 chromosome species and is willing to give the seeds for cash please let me know i would love to grow these incredibly cold hardy persimmins and get new genetics.
Sergio Cunha wrote:I don't think there's a synonym for permaculture because of its holistical aproach. I don't know of any other system that sees elements and their connections as a whole as permaculture does.