Kimberlay Kiernan

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since Apr 05, 2022
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Riviera Nayarit, Mexico
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Recent posts by Kimberlay Kiernan

I am living in a suburban place in Mexico. When I moved here out of the Puerto Vallarta area, I found someone who had Moringa seeds. I planted 4 and all came up through the winter. Easy peasy. When I tried to transplant the first one, I snapped the trunk. Three left. I started harvesting the leaves, beans, flowers, seeds in the late second  year and do so every quarter. All of Moringa is edible and when I air dry the leaves and powder them I have all of the minerals and vitamins , protein, and fiber my body  requires and have more to give away. Studies on the nutrition says it supports life on its own and has been used for starving people globally. I keep them at about 10 feet high and they are easy to harvest, hang to dry on a clothes line in my tiny yard, and powder in a couple of days. I gave one to a friend for his birthday and he let his grow. It was 10 feet high when I gave it to hime and now in one year it is 23 feet high and yielding huge amounts of leaves, flowers, beans, and seeds.  My current two  are in big plastic pots because I am a renter and can move every year or so. As soon as I move to a place with enough space to earth plant them, they will go in. I have 3 4 year old papaya trees grown from seed, ealso in pots, and at least 1 will fruit for me this year. I also maintain 50 lb of dried black beans, 25 lb of rice, and about 25 lb of assorted flours, baking soda, vinegars etc.  I will be  planting several shallow window boxes with carrots, beets, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, and lettuces in the next new moon.  Zucchini is a plentiful yielder, and great picked young.  Dried beans can grow and provide plentiful green beans. As soon as I harvest a window box, I replant it with its next crop. Compost all scraps in a trash size bucket for replanting with excellent "gold" soil.  Assorted trees well spaced in whatever space you  have can provide assorted fruits. I have discovered that once I kicked the sugar habit, I can live very well on what I grow and buy some dairy, eggs, cheeses. Peanut butter is essential. I share with neighbours especially kids. You have gotta start NOW!  Learn as you go.  
I boil up chicken livers and hearts then drain them and freeze them for treats. The broth is heaven for dogs Drizzle a little bit of it with coconut oil over the dog food. Love at first bite.
5 months ago
I pronounce it Per-i-do (silent T) with the accent on per and the e short.
5 months ago
I am in Mexico near Lake Chapala. I planted 3 moringa seeds in 3 pots in 2022. All grew and I transplanted them to large pots ( more like bins, actually) in 2023. They did very well. In 2024 I harvested leaves every quarter, and 2025 too. I have had to keep pruning the tops to 11 feet as I live in rentals with no “growth space. In June 2025 , I gave one away to a friend for his birthday. He planted it in the soil and it has taken on furiously. They hate it when you prune them and won’t let them live in the ground. All 3 bore blossoms in 2024, one which I named Brenda. I harvested leaves from the two “males” . All blossoms fertilized and bore seeds. “Her brother” is now bearing lots of blossoms. Transgender?? Haha. That mature to 20-30 feet. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy. Rosemary and marigold foils the leaf cutter ants.
I like the cloak. I was a nurse back in the late 60's and we were given a cape to wear over our uniforms. It looked pretty smart, navy wool, with a brass button, certainly nicer than a sweater, but it did not cover and protect my uniform, keep my arms and hands warm, or shut out the chill Toronto winds or the gusts from the streetcars.   The cloak is voluminous. It covers from the top of the head if necessary to the ankles and if I flex my knees I can tuck my feet in. It is a blanket and can wrap and let me sleep. And it can also cover whatever I am holding.  Warm and safe and snuggly. UNLESS...it happens to be a cloak of INVISIBILITY. In that case the entire discussion takes on a totally altered potential and totally unlimited!  Don't we all prefer intrigue and a touch of magic?  Kimberlay
3 years ago
👩‍🦳  Yes! The topic and information is HOT right now. AT least where I AM, there are hordes of newbies that have escaped here from elsewhere, and have NEVER gardened but feel they MUST if they are going to survive. You know...."grow your own". Well a lot of us are new to the location, new to getting our hands dirty, have no idea how to start, what to plant, how to actually DO that, how much to watch, weed, water (www.) and when to harvest, seed save, grieve the loss of your experiment, gain the lesson, apply it and change and then start again. With GRATITUDE!  If that could come out ONLINE how incredible that would be. Besides your kickstarter bonuses are magical.
3 years ago
Way back in the late 60's I wore clogs exclusively while working in a hospital. They also had a thin rubber sole attached to the wood. Too many slips if not there.  The head of orthopedics wore them in the OR, so Human resources could not object. They are Wonderful!!!  However, be careful about the heel enclosure . It must be low on the heel so the achilles tendon is no compressed and the ankle can flex! Good luck!   Kimberlay Kiernan
3 years ago