James Bradford

pollinator
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since Oct 15, 2024
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Salado, Texas
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Recent posts by James Bradford

I would love to trade some fig cuttings for some of your harvest ...just a few pods for me to plant in Jarrell or Houston.
1 week ago
Yay, food!   ...in the form of fresh pecans

The paper shell tree is actually outside of the area that I've been caring for, and it almost set a bumper crop this year.   September and October have been very dry though, and it caused the tree to partially abort about 1/10 of its crop last month.   Those pecans ripened early and the meat in them was only 1/3 ish of normal.   It was interesting how the tree handled the lack of water.   Of the current harvest, another 1/4 of the pecans are dried out inside ...still good for me to eat, but not marketable.    If I had that tree wood chipped in like the rest, I would have gotten a much better crop, so the next loads I get are for sure going there.

On harvesting, this is the 1st year I used a pole and tarp.   I highly recommend it.    I don't have squirrels in Jarrell, but there is a wood pecker that punches a hole in the pecans and eats about two bites before the pecan falls and she goes to another.   The ants end up eating the rest.   So, I left a few for the wood pecker, and knocked the rest out of the tree with a long bamboo pole down onto a tarp.  Its definitely worth the extra effort on tarp and pole vs. waiting for the pecans to fall.   I think probably this method is more efficient than those fancy tractors with a trunk thumpers when you consider the cost of a tractor vs. a pole.

Pecan cracking ergonomics 101:

1.  Standing is a little faster, but make sure cracker is waist high as well as the tray of pecans and jars
2.  Sitting is a little slower, but I can take longer shelling shifts from my chair.
3.  On sitting, its worth the effort to get everything just "so" ... pads, foot rest, location of pecans to be cracked, jars for marketable nuts, and jars for "for me" nuts.

1 week ago
The six wild seeds that I collected are:

1.  wild sunflower
2.  soap berry
3.  beauty berry
4.  rose
5. old man's beard
6.  native pecan

bonus mustache of mullein

1 week ago
potpourri ...that's what they remind me of, definitely unique as you say!
2 weeks ago
I wonder, can we have different lists of "3" for each climate zone and soil type?

I'm 8b on clay soil.   Lambs-quarter is hands down my favorite and easiest to grow green and it has 9ish month growing season down here.   My brother says its so bad that even the bugs won't eat it, but I like it just fine and it is my staple fiber source most of the year.    For the cooler weather, I switch to arugula which reseeds better than kale.   I can get 9ish months out of it too if I sprout new plants on the regular.

In central Texas, sweet potatoes are borderline as far as growing maintenance free goes ... in Houston they do great, and if you build a hill and cover with wood chips, they are super easy to harvest.   Its exactly what you can plant and forget about for 4 years.

Walking onions are a win here too!   I'm wishing I had more, and more garlic to go with  ...if only I'd just forget about them for 4 years, but I eat from them almost everyday.

Oyster mushrooms do great here in the winter, but you gotta figure out how to create a consistent cool, moist, oxygenated place for them ...I kinda cheat and use big plastic buckets, but definitely a great source of easy calories.

I'm just now experimenting with eating Wandering Jew.   Its a spiderwort family plant that grows all over around here without effort or watering ...it has 9ish month season here as well.
Hi all,

I've got my 6x7x7 hugel built, and I'm currently looking for the Sepp Holzer grains to plant in it.   I'd like to claim the free seeds for reaching BB20 if that's still possible, but I'm also ok to buy the required amount for the gardening BB.

Please moosage me if you have the seeds and I'll send my address and funds.
2 weeks ago
Whew, its getting dry out there.   We've had more rain over summer this year than usual, but its dry as ever now.   I'm on a siphon system.   It's very complicated and consists of a water hose dipped into my cistern.   The cistern is partially buried, and when it gets low, I have to draw the water from low ...even to the point of digging a hole for my water buckets.    This is the last of my "easy" water.   Once the level gets too low to pre-fill this tote, I'll have to fill each bucket with the siphon hose.   Its a natural way for me to know that its "dry-time" and to shift from "keep 'em growing" to "keep alive" only.

In other news:  

Sweet potatoes do grow well under a huge layer of wood chips and are easy to harvest.   This is the first year that they've done well after 2 previous failure years.

The wood chips in the middle of my driveway are still moist down under, so doing their job.

Macali (one of the resident felines) knows to keep an eye on El Chapo ...who is just hanging out hoping for a belly rub.  Still he's not to be trusted.

2 weeks ago
My ants attack my okra, after 3 years finally they are saving some for me.  I've also witnessed the ant/aphid thing ...not a fan of that relationship yet either.   Hopefully the insect populations will soon find harmony with my plants as the overall fertility and biodiversity improve.   I will report back when there is better news!
2 weeks ago
It was a while before I learned about how various cooking oils respond to heat.   The bottom of this page might help you select your best cooking oil options depending on the cooking temps

https://www.chhs.colostate.edu/krnc/monthly-blog/cooking-with-fats-and-oils/

oils can be solvents for all sorts of things, so simpler is probably better; ie:  glass container, brush or pour it on.
3 weeks ago
you're so organized!  great work!
3 weeks ago