Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2020

Wake me up when election season ends

 Welcome back to another episode of Lost In the Farmers Market, and sorry for the bad mangling of Green Day’s song ‘Wake me up when September Ends’ but let’s be real the elections have been brutal. Fortunately for all of you this isn’t a political blog, well not in the normal sense so I’m not even going to talk about the elections any more than you’ve just seen. Nope, though I do have to comment that we have officially had more tropical storms and hurricanes than in any prior year; below is a link to a CNN article that lists all of them.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/11/us/2020-atlantic-hurricane-season-fast-facts/index.html

Now, that is pretty insane and we still have about a month and half to go in the year. By my fast count that’s twenty-nine storms in total. I don’t recall us ever running out of names and having to go into the Greek alphabet for names but we’re up to Theta, all the while Eta is still slapping around as we speak. I don’t know about all of you out there but if we get close to Omega, I’m building an Ark. Joke aside the reality is that the storms, the pandemic and other events are a direct result of climate change. It was predicted that as we mess with the global temperature via things like deforestation and pollution, we would have more storms, the seal level would rise and of course more pathogens would go full-on pandemic. We as individual can make small decisions to lessen our impact and in our own way that helps slow down the damage being done by the masses. For every square foot of garden you plant you trap some carbon and extract some C02 from the atmosphere and possibly other harmful pollutants in the air, soil and water. If anything given the horror side-show that 2020 has been planting a plot of garden can act as a means of shoring up your mental health, this year’s veggie patch is bigger and better than it’s ever been. In fact here’s a picture of the finished task;



To start this picture-heavy discussion I have to answer a simple question. Why did I add extra area onto an existing and productive vegetable bed? Well, I didn’t do it because I wanted more veggies, I did it to solve a yearly problem with cold-season crops for sale at the market. Every year I produce more plants for sale than I could ever sell. This is done for two reasons, firstly I do need some for my own growing operations, but also I need some to counter losses that will inevitably happen. Some plants just aren’t vigorous or get eaten by bugs or simply die for reasons unknown. Other plants are so vigorous that they out grow their existing pot and this catches my eye and they end up as a specimen or something I propagate to obtain the seed or cuttings. More often than not some plants don’t sell and I wind up with too many using up resources in a pot too small for them to really reach full potential. So to remedy some of that I added 2’ 3” to the width of my veggie bed to utilize some of those plants that are the most numerous on the growing trays. Either way it’s a win in general, I mean look at it! All you gardeners out there know that feeling you get when you set something like this up and then look at it maybe, right after, and then a week after and then a month or so after and there’s this intense feeling of contentment. You built that and it’s successful because you wanted it to be. Ironically that is why we are here today; I wanted to show you how the above garden was expanded because it demonstrates how I actually start new garden beds.



It all starts with peeling back the lawn.  For those of you who are regular readers of this blog you know my stance on lawns. For those who don’t the TL;DR version is that lawns are mostly worthless. They don’t produce food, they don’t enrich the soil, they attempt to compete with crops, and they require extra maintenance to look their best. So with that said out with the lawn and in with the vegetable bed. My favorite tool for this is a stirrup hoe which as you can see in the picture has a truncated triangular head that allows it to get under the lawn (or weeds) and separate the fine roots from the greenery. It’s pretty much a guillotine for plants when you really think about it; and it’s not too far of a step to think of lawn grass like an un-elected monarchy. Another advantage to using a Stirrup how in comparison to other types is that it cuts relatively straight lines and you really don’t work as hard to get the same effect. Before anyone jumps on me and says ‘Hey I thought this blog didn’t advertise!’ we don’t but tools and materials do come from wherever they come from and you can’t always cover over the brand logos. So in the wheelbarrow I have several bags of Black Kow composted cow manure. I use this because its consistency is uniform and its price for a 32lb bag is about $5.00 which is fairly economical. The product quality is very reliable and there is a bit of clay and sand so it’s weighty enough to not readily erode in the rain. Black Kow also is also 0.5-0.5-0.5 (NPK) in terms of nutrient so it cannot burn unless you concentrate it artificially somehow. For the record; from the actual bag of Black Kow, it also adds 1.0 in chlorine, now that part is interesting. As it turns out plants need Chlorine since it is important in the function of plant stomata opening and closing. Now for those of you who don’t study plant biology, this means that Chlorine is critical to a plants ability to exchange gasses which improves their impact on reducing carbon foot prints.



So the next step is to remove the cut bits of grass and weeds and then do a double check for any survivors and remove them too. Inevitably at this stage I find bits of wild Bermuda grass, and a few stolons of Centipede grass. As much soil as is possible is returned to the area and the edges are trimmed a little more.


To cover an area of 2’ 3” by 10’ at a rate of roughly 2.5 inches deep on average it takes all of three out of four bags of composted manure. The fine ridges along the sides that you see in the composted manure are where I tamped down the sides with a hard rake just to firm up the outer boundaries of the soil so they don’t erode as much if it rains. At the center of the bed expansion the composted manure is 2.5” deep at least but this tapers in the border to add more resistance to erosion.



    Now we move onto the fun part, the planting. Those eagle-eyed readers out there might notice I planted a LOT of green Swiss chard, Marrowstem Kale and some smaller hard to identify plants. This selection of cold-season food plants was not due to my own preferences. As some of you know I sell food plants at the downtown market, and inevitably I produce more than I sell most of the time so surplus has to go somewhere and waste not, want not. I had an overabundance of Swiss Chard this fall, and so to reduce inventory about a quarter of it went into this project, the same is true for the Marrowstem Kale. The Kale though is a bit of an oddity, it was a new introduction and folks didn’t seem to want to take a chance on it, which is a shame. As they say, you can lead a gardener to the kale patch but you can’t make him or her eat it.  Seven 3” potted Marrowstem Kale plants went into this project. The little plants in the top third of the new bed are another item that I trialed this year, Rainbow Lacinato Kale. Those seedlings are the best of the third attempt to sow a full tray of the stuff. The first two trays failed and the third was so slow-developing I realized I would not have saleable plants before the frost. So the best of that tray went into the garden, twelve individual growing cells that hopefully will show me what the Rainbow Kale looks like. Supposedly Rainbow Lacinato Kale is called that because it’s stems and by extension it’s foliage develops a variety of colors ranging from shades of green, to yellow, red, purple pink and supposedly blue, but we’ll see. You can bet that when they develop there will be pictures posted up here for your viewing delight.


    Although it’s a given that the soil I used has a decent amount of nutrients for the crops planted. It is for the best that nothing is left to chance and a slow release mineral-based fertilizer with micro nutrients is applied. This fertilizer should be effective for a few months which is more than long enough for this crop.

 


    The cleanup of assorted shrapnel is one of the last steps but is also an important stage in getting things done. All this dead lawn will be dumped in the hedgerow and either it will contribute to the hedgerow by growing or become soil for other things.



The next step is the application of Long Leaf pine straw by way of pitchfork. Pine straw is an effective mulch because it has so much surface area to resist erosion. Quality pine straw can last up to two years as an effective barrier. Also it is very good at stopping weeds and even encroaching grass has to struggle to go over or under it. When pine straw breaks down it becomes organic matter which helps the soil, but it does not block rain from getting through to the soil so unlike weed block it isn’t going to be a long term problem. While Pine straw does slow down the movement of water it is not enough to cause water-logging or soil loss under normal conditions. It is also inexpensive; the local rate per bale of pine straw is $3.88 to $4.75 roughly speaking. It only took two bales to do the entire perimeter of the veggie patch. For the record two bales shored up 41 feet of garden border at an average depth of 1”.  



The last step of course is watering it all in because by planting these plants I’ve caused a bit of trauma. I tear up the peat pots before I plant to make it easier for my crops to grow beyond their boundaries. I know that the advantage to peat pots is that you don’t have to do that, but when it comes to food crops for use at home, I don’t leave that to chance.

As a final thought for this post before we move on to the advertisement part of this post, I know some of you are wondering why I just used composted cow manure instead of potting soil or something lighter. Well erosion is a thing, but the compost makes for the sub-soil in the first year, I cap it in the second year with spent potting soil which then better mimics an enriched soil profile. In the long-run the soil ends up blending due to the actions of my own maintenance of the bed and the actions of soil-borne organisms. It also the best remedy in the long run for the solid sand soil on my property and a good way to recycle resources.



With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.

Fresh Produce:*
Soup Kit: Parsnip: $6.00
Soup Kit: Turnip: $6.00
Seasoning Packet: $2.00
Garlic Bulbs: $1.00

Food Plants: (3” Peat Pots) (ALL ON SALE!!!)
Arugula: $2.00
Cardoon, Artichoke: $2.00
Carrot, Chantennay Red-Core: $2.00
Collards, Carolina: $2.00
Kale, Lace: $2.00
Kale, Marrow Stem: $2.00
Kale, Scotch Blue Curled: $2.00
Kale, Winterbor: $2.00
Kohlrabi, Cossack: $2.00
Swiss Chard, Green: $2.00
Swiss Chard, Red: $2.00
Spinach, Avon: $2.00

Coming Soon:
Ginger


*You can special order a specific vegetable by the pound if you want anything specific that is in the soup kits or any specific herb contained in the seasoning packets. Vegetables are sold by the pound and seasonings are sold by the ounce when sold individually.

We have a new place to share information and work on groovy sustainable stuff!  You can look for Sustainable Neighbors in our own Nextdoor.com group under the name “Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville”. You don’t have to live in Fayetteville to join but it is a private group so feel free to request to join us if you are signed up on the Nextdoor.com site.

https://nextdoor.com/g/ybvdm226x/?is=nav_bar

Unfortunately, Covid-19 is still mucking up the works in terms of meeting in person. The good news is that Sustainable Neighbors does have a Discord Server. You can request access through our Meetup.com page or you can request access via our Nextdoor.com group. The meetup.com page is below for anyone looking to join us.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to buy anything or maintain any sort of attendance standard, you can come on in and join the meetings. When this Covid-19 mess calms down we may be able to resume normal in-person meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market. This brings to a close the twenty-first LITFM post of 2020; stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 13th of November. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.

Monday, September 21, 2020

The Smoke From A Distant Fire

 Welcome back to another episode of Lost In the Farmers Market, where we talk about garden stuff and occasionally get on a really tiny soap box.  So let’s open this post with a discussion about the sudden change in weather. As you all might have noticed things have gotten rainy and cooler overall. This isn’t actually the onset of autumn, this is a side effect of the massive number of fires on the west coast and the smoke they are generating having a cooling effect as the smoke adds haze to the skies. The rain is part of a series of hurricanes and tropical depressions altering the normal weather patterns to bring about more moisture. With these environmental factors combined they are Captain Planet! No, wait that’s  not right…correction, these environmental factors are literal climate change at work. The wild fires are due to the fact that the west is tinder dry due to a long-standing shortfall in precipitation. Despite what a certain person might say, eighteen month old trees don’t normally suddenly explode like a grenade, and leaf cleanup while technically managed by controlled burns isn’t going to magically reverse changes in climate patterns. When you have a portion of a continent that isn’t getting precipitation over a long it undergoes what is called desertification. Basically the lack of rain to refill undergrounds aquifers and surface bodies of water causes the given region to become inhospitable to a multitude of life forms. If this persists the land and climate will slowly revert to something akin to an actual desert. Desertification is a process that can be reversed but it takes a big government-level investment and it may take generations worth of time to undo. Likewise as we see higher high temperatures across the globe the end result is more numerous storm activity events ranging from tornadoes, to derechos, tropical depressions and hurricanes. This is a harder process to reverse as it will take a global commitment, and potentially a century or two of major changes to our life styles and habits to make any meaningful change. Defeating climate change is a tall order but it is something you can help with by doing little things like recycling and making compost. Planting trees can help lock away some carbon while also feeding and improving the soil can create biodiversity and help in reducing C02. We all need to do a little bit to make sure that there is something left for future generations to enjoy.

But enough of that, in terms of differing gardening news the Autumn Botanical Test Garden tour is coming up. I am shooting for the 18th of October between the hours of 2pm and 5pm. It is hoped that by then we will have seen another reduction in the Covid-19 restrictions and the weather will cooperate. If not, expect to bring masks, and the Rain Date for the event will be the 25th of October, just before Halloween. By then I can assure you there will be plenty of fall delights for your gardening fancy and you get to see what’s going on in the test gardens. I can tell you this, 2020 despite politics and other crazy things that happened has been an amazing harvest year, so you can expect some impressive information and some ideas that flip the script when it comes to gardening. But let’s move on from the shameless promotions to talk some crazy-good garden stuff.


Southern Praying Mantis (Stagmomantis carolina)

-This is a male.


Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus)

Two events tell me that summer is at it's end, Labor Day and the arrival of Monarch Butterflies. The monarchs come for the late summer milkweed blossoms and the nectar they produce as they migrate southwards towards South America. It is truthfully my humble contribution to the survival of such majestic insects that are endangered by habitat loss when I plant varied colors and types of milkweed.



Golden Northern Bumblebee ( Bombus fervidus)

I've said it before, but here's some proof; the test gardens does not focus on Honey Bees, it focuses on native pollinators for the sake of encouraging native bio-diversity. Golden Northern bumblebees were a pleasant surprise this year as they seemed to love hitting up the Blue African Basil and the Tithonia (pictured) hardcore.


Cicada (Neotibicen sp.)

This year was supposed to be among all that has happened this year; a mega cicada brook named brood XI emerged in 2020 and made their presence known. I also noticed an rise in the number of Cicada killers this year before the Cicadas emerged and this might be a biologically timed response or a fluke. I did not have a lot of cicadas in the test gardens because I have a large Cicada Killer Wasp population that comes to feed on nectar from my mint plants.

 

 

In case you've never seen it this is what an eggplant looks like when left on the plant long enough to produce seeds.


With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.


Food Plants: (3” Peat Pots)
Arugula: $3.00
Mustard, Red Giant: $3.00
Kale, Lace: $3.00
Kale, Lacinato: $3.00
Kale, Scotch Blue Curled: $3.00
Celery, Tango: $3.00

Herbs: (3” Peat Pots)
Black Fennel: $3.00

Coming Soon:
Cabbage, Ruby Perfection
Chicory, Curled Endive
Collards, Alabama Blue
Collards, Carolina
Lettuce, Cherokee Fire
Kale, Marrow Stem
Kale, Red Russian
Kale, Rainbow Lacinato
Swiss Chard, Red
Swiss Chard, Green
Spinach, Avon


Due to the current Covid-19 situation and the state’s requirement that all citizens are not to gather in groups of more than ten, the weekly Sustainable neighbors meeting is online. Please check the sustainable neighbors Meetup.com page for more info about how to attend our online meeting.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market. This brings to a close the eighteenth LITFM post of 2020; stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 2nd of October. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Brothers In Arms 2020


Welcome back to another episode of Lost In the Farmers Market, in respects to things going on nationally this episode will be a special one. Nine years ago on this blog I posted an article called ‘Brothers In Arms’ which shed light on a piece of horticultural history that is worth remembering.  The following is a nearly verbatim posting of the exact script I used to make the thirtieth episode of LITFM Garden Shorts with some noteworthy changes to add details that simply did not fit into the video format.  

As I stated earlier, I will be discussing a section of American history that should be remembered if only so that we do not repeat it.  Right now as a result of the killing of George Floyd on May 25th 2020, in combination with the Covid-19 pandemic the nation has seen a series of riots, protests and a political movement the likes of which have very little comparison. The former event did not happen in a vacuum, because it was at the time the most recent and outrageous of killings of African-Americans by the police under questionable circumstances. There are many other names of individuals killed by the police in ways that deserve detailed information and yet at the risk of bogging down this post with a list of names and circumstances that would take several blog posts just to discuss. It highlights that the peculiar institution of racism permeates America’s police forces who have been systematically overburdened with duties beyond the proper scope of what they should be doing. If you add in politics and the fact that many police departments have their origins in the slave catchers of the past you get a professional culture of bias. This is a mirror for American culture as a whole, we got rid of Slavery on December 6th 1865, and Jim Crow laws replaced it in some parts. The last of the Jim Crow laws were stricken down in 1965, somewhere in between Peonage happened and was finally stricken down in the 1940s. Now we have the unfair housing policy, the pipeline to incarceration, gentrification and other economic and political policies that continue on in the shadow of what should be “The Land of the Free”. Compared to real demonstrable policies and practices that truly disenfranchise people of African descent in comparison cultural appropriation becomes a distracting joke that that serves to act as bait to get your eyes off the prize. But of course you are here for a taste of agricultural history that should never be forgotten and with that we have the 2020 version of ‘Brothers In Arms’


The plants being discussed today are a pair I often refer to as 'Brothers in Arms' and no that's not Cacao and Marijuana, in fact it's a pair far more common and overlooked. Cotton and Okra have been a part of American agriculture for quite some time but their origins in agriculture go even further back. These two plants often go unquestioned to a point that some think they originated in the United States. Nothing could be further from the truth however; there are few plants that have such deep roots in the slave trade, abolition, genocide, subjugation and rebellion as these two.  Both Cotton and Okra are in the Malvaceae family which is more commonly known as the Mallow or Hibiscus family. If there was any doubt of the fact one need only see the flowers of either and all doubts are cast aside.

Abelmoschus esculentus 'Baby Bubba' - Baby Bubba Okra

The scientific name of Okra is Abelmoschus esculentus, esculentus means edible, and thus far the meaning of Abelmoschus remains unclear but this plant’s seed pods are a staple of southern cuisine. Okra isn’t native to the Americas and it arrived via New Orleans from Africa circa 1700. It is no surprise that Okra caught on as its foliage could be used as a medicine, its pods were used to thicken soups and stews and its seeds could be roasted into a coffee substitute. Okra originates from Africa, the very name 'Okra' is a perversion of one of the original names for this agricultural favorite. Some of the original names for it are Ocro, Guiabo, Guimgombo, ngombo and, Nkru. Ngombo is from the Bantu language southern Africa and may be the originating word for ‘Gumbo’. The word Nkru in respect was found to come from the Ashanti Language of western Africa. The cultivation of okra was developed enough to have become a major staple of Egypt for centuries before it was spread to the Far East and the European nations and finally the Americas.  In medicinal light Okra is noted to have been used as a means of abortion by African slaves to prevent their children from being forced to live under slavery. In the states that allowed slaves to grow their own food it has been said that the ‘off’ color okra varieties were left to them, while the more traditional green types were grown and sold by their owners as a cash crop. Interestingly in my research it turns out that the Okra variety ‘Red Burgundy’ is not an African-American Heirloom variety, it was developed by Leon Robbins at Clemson University in South Carolina in 1983. With that said, at the Market, I am never shy about telling visitors about the origins and nature of Okra. I often get a variety of responses ranging from a knowing nod to gratitude for telling the stories, anger over a system that was even more flawed than had been previously thought and occasional disagreement. A few years back I got into a heated argument with a visitor who was absolutely certain I had made the whole history of Okra up. He was certain I was just ‘race-baiting’ and he dropped a few more modern political labels that I won’t repeat here. The fact is America has a pretty ugly history and some don’t want to even consider that any of negative stuff happened.

            This leads to a discussion of Cotton. We know cotton, if you think about how often it is represented in film and on television, if there is a scene shot that is supposed to be in the south you are going to see a field of cotton somewhere.  What you see there is probably American Upland Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum).  Everyone knows what the fluffy cotton bolls look like as they look like white clouds dangling off strange looking plants that seem to lack good foliage and you almost never see the flowers. Cotton in respects was a wide spread plant grown in several differing continents and climates but one the original varieties brought to the Americas Gossypium herbaceum is thought to have been originally cultivated in Ethiopia or southern Arabia.  Cotton was a major product of the southern American economy and became economically important with the mechanization of the industry and the rise and expansion of slave labor in the Americas.

Gossypium hirsutum 'Red Foliated White - Red Foliated White Cotton 
120 days [From SSE member Alice Gamewel via Charles Hoehnle. Introduced 2008 by SESE.] A beautiful plant with dark red stems and leaves. 3-5 ft. tall, grows well in a container or in a flower bed. Green when it first emerges but soon develops its red coloring. The cotton is a short staple white.

https://www.southernexposure.com/products/red-foliated-white-cotton/


The interesting thing about Cotton is that during the American slave trade, slaves were prohibited from growing white cotton for themselves. Since white cotton was the major economic export the slave owners plainly wanted to sell as much agricultural product as was possible.  The end result was that slaves were allowed to grow assorted colored varieties such as Nankeen, Mississippi brown, and Green Lint types. The intentional disparity in which cotton to grow became a symbol of the slave trade in America and the systemic institution of racism. When it comes to the harvesting of cotton few realize how much effort it takes. Typically the Cotton bolls are easy enough to identify, but the plants tended to bear them low. The actual pods from which the cotton fiber bursts often were hardened off sharp and dangerous to the unwary picker. If one were to add in the heat of the southern sun and the humid weather during harvest time harvesting cotton could be likened to a sampling of hell.  It is no wonder that the Anaconda plan during the American Civil War was aimed at preventing supplies of cotton from getting to Europe. General Sherman’s march to the sea wasn’t coincidental; by destroying thousands of tons of cotton, financially his march broke the economic back of the Confederacy.

 
Gossypium hirsutum 'Mississippi Brown' - Mississippi Brown Cotton
 130 days. [Pre-1860. Once grown by enslaved Africans, this seed came from a plantation near Natchez, Mississippi via seed saver John Coykendall.] Drought-tolerant 5 ft. tall plants produce an abundance of light tan to golden brown cotton. Some plants have deeply lobed leaves like Nankeen.

https://www.southernexposure.com/products/mississippi-brown-cotton/



Finally it is important to note that on the medicinal front, some slaves were known to make a tonic of sorts from the root of Gossypium herbaceum in the attempt to cause an abortion no doubt for the exact reason noted above in the information for Okra. The harvesting of Cotton may be one of the experiences that a lot of gardeners could use if only to get a feel for the weight of the history. When I say Okra and Cotton are brothers in arms they may as well be, they are related, and they have become opposite sides of a proverbial coin upon which an entire nation's future rested. I must admit, the aforementioned is unusually dark by LITFM standards but American history is full of such things, even in the field of agriculture there are unpleasant things that get buried in the progress of the years.

Gossypium hirsutum 'Erlene's Green Lint' - Erlene's Green Lint Cotton
130 days. [Family heirloom from Erlene Melancon in east Texas. Erlene said that she has been spinning green cotton for years and that her grandmother loved using colored cotton in her quilts.] The fibers are light olive green and can be spun off the seed. Harvest the bolls shortly after they open so that the fiber does not fade in the sunlight. Once it is spun and washed it turns yellowish-green. 5 ft. tall plants.

https://www.southernexposure.com/products/erlene-s-green-cotton/


Now for those still wishing to grow Okra and Cotton here is how you grow each. Both Cotton and Okra are easy to grow; they require a well-drained soil and can tolerate a variety of nutrient issues and soil structure problems. Okra is more tolerant of poor soil whereas Cotton is a heavy feeder and will require fertilizer in most cases.  The one thing neither will tolerate is being constantly wet, both get root or stem rot very rapidly if they are kept too wet. Both plants are transplant-sensitive and may appear to stop growing briefly when transplanted, the truth is both plants generally establish heavy networks of roots and their top growth often lags behind.   Cotton is an attractive plant once mature as it forms a dense shrubby habit and its mature leaves are glossy lobed and resembles giant Ivy leaves. The flower of cotton varies in color based on species but it is always quite pretty and large in typical mallow fashion. Okra is a strictly upright plant with a conical shape, depending on variety and climate its height generally tops off at about six feet. Okra typically has deeply lobed leaves and some heritage varieties come in hues of yellow, orange and red tones. Okra flowers are no less attractive then cotton flowers with the exception that they seem to only come in a cheery butter-yellow. The general time from flower to okra pod is usually about three days and okra pods ten to be ready for picking in less than a week after the flower fades.



With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.

Plants & Stuff Available Now:

Food Plants:
Peanuts, African Runner: $3.00

Herbs:
Herb, Basil – Eritrean: $3.00
Herb, Basil – Holy: $3.00
Herb, Cuban Oregano – Cerveza & Lime: $3.00
Herb, Horehound: $3.00
Herb, Oregano, Italian: $3.00
Herb, Roselle – Thai Red: $3.00
Herb, Thyme – English: $3.00

Herb, Horehound, 5" pot: $4.00
Herb, Oregano, 6” pot: $5.00
Herb, Italian Oregano, 5” pot: $4.00
Herb, Bristol Cross Oregano –  6” Pot: $5.00
Herb, Sage,  5" pot: $4.00
Herb, Shiso, 5" pot $5.00
Herb, English Thyme, 5" pot:$4.00


Ornamental Plants:
Cotton, Erlene’s Green: $3.00
Cotton,  Mississippi Brown Lint: $3.00
Cotton , Red Foliated White: $3.00
Marigold, Pineapple Crush: $3.00
Marigold, Signet Red: $3.00
Zinnia, Golden Star: $3.00

Milkweed, Hairy Balls: $4.00
Rudbeckia, Prairie Glow: $4.00

Coming Soon:
[TBA]

Due to the current Covid-19 situation and the state’s requirement that all citizens are not to gather in groups of more than ten, the weekly Sustainable neighbors meeting is online. Please check the sustainable neighbors Meetup.com page for more info about how to attend our online meeting.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market. This brings to a close the fourteenth LITFM post of 2020; stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 7th of August. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Technical Difficulties and whatnot


Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmers Market.  As you will notice this post is late, and this is getting to become a habit. The work making the YouTube videos is eating up more time than I thought it would and it’s producing longer videos of improved quality that I hope you all are enjoying. I’m going to try and keep this blog to the twice per month schedule and align its content with the video content. The next post up here which is due next Friday will align with the 30th video LITFM Garden Shorts video. Basically the written transcript of the video will be up here and you can see more details than were available in the video. This post although a week late, is going to focus on cool stuff going on in the test gardens.

Before I get into the lavish photographs of plants you have a mighty need for in your gardens there is one more thing. As a point of obligatory social responsibility I have to state here, that we are in the grips of a pandemic. While I will not dare speak of how the rest of the world is handling it, I can say that United States has not done so well. We haven’t even finished the first wave and now states that thought bravado would suffice, and bought into the falsehood that summer heat would defeat the virus and that once you had it you are immune are ironically now being hit with the virus. The problem with Covid-19 is that it kills 1% of those it infects which is still a little over three million people if you consider the United States population of 328.2 million as of 2019. That’s a lot of dead people, but that in a full nineteen percent of the people it infects they are left with permanent lung and heart damage, circulatory issues, the damage from strokes and other maladies that may take them out of the workforce and put them on some form of disability. That’s 20% of the entire potential and or existing workforce gone, that is why this pandemic is no laughing matter. The intention of this statement is to hammer home the point that has been made by so many health professionals across the world, if you are out and about limit your trips, avoid crowds, practice social distancing and wear a facial covering that securely covers the mouth and nose. This is as much for you as it is for everyone around you. I have personally already had three close calls with Covid-19 and two of them were because of a third party’s negligence. Being required to wear a mask is not an infringement of your first amendment rights, it is not going to kill you with C02, and anyone who prints out those fake ADA cards to get around doing the right thing should feel ashamed for being so selfish. If you want to make Covid-19 and this stupid Pandemic go away and get things back to normal, wear the damn mask!

Now, that was kind of dark but, as promised I have some garden highlights that will perk you up not unlike a thunder-shower perks up wilted plants in the afternoon. Firstly as some of you might know it is pepper season. Pepper season is that magical three or so month’s right on the tail end of the Blueberry season when my wide array of pepper varieties start ripening. For years I’ve had this crazy idea that at some point I should do a composite picture with the pepper varieties marked and noted so customers could tell them apart when they buy the pepper bags at the market. Well in 2020 that idea became a reality with the first big pepper harvest of the year. I’ll do another sheet like this when other varieties are ready to harvest.




Here we have a mixture of varied Coneflower varieties that are so tall they are practically mocking your garden books! They are over three feet tall, and what’s not to love about one of the most widely known medicinal daisies?



This is Beach Rose (Rosa rugosa) in bloom, and what a lovely shade of pink. Beach rose is one of the few rose family members that can handle salt spray, sandy soils and will spread by underground runners at a somewhat slow pace. It produces the largest rosehips of the entire rose family and those hips are packed with vitamin C.
 

Oh look it’s the coneheads…but a week later. Literally a week after I noted the heights of my coneflowers in the picture above, they produces taller flower stalks that were at eye level on me, that’s six feet high folks! Remember what I always say, plants are illiterate, they don’t care what your books say.
 

How about them Hibiscuses! This is a Swamp Mallow (Hibiscus moscheutos) and it is one of the more tropical looking hibiscus that are perennial in your garden here in North Carolina. These herbaceous perennials are hardy from USDA zones 5 through 8.  But the real reward is those giant 6” super-red flowers that look like they belong in the tropics! That these plants can get to six feet tall in a growing season is a double bonus.
 


Ah yes, some of you know what this is, some of you do not know. These are the flowers of the ‘Hairy Balls’ Milkweed (Gomphocarpus physocarpus), they hang upside down and the bumble bees seem to love them. Honestly I like the white and pink coloration as it’s completely random to what you expect from Mlikweed. Once the seed pods form you can bet there will be photographs posted here.


Now this is not normal, here we have the bloom of a domesticated carrot (Daucus carrota). Its bloom resembles several poisonous lookalikes in the wild. I know it is a Luna White carrot because I grew it from seed purchased from a reputable vendor. I should note that a wild carrot is commonly known as Queen Anne’s Lace and such a plant has the same scientific name as a domesticated carrot. There are several deadly lookalikes such as wild parsnip and poison hemlock.
 


Lastly we have one hell of a prize, here is the flower of ‘Giant Mission’ Marigolds (Tagetes erecta). The seed for these annuals is only available through Burpee seeds and these marigolds can get up to three feet tall. Their flowers have a chrysanthemum style of petals and shape and if I am lucky the seed harvested will be viable enough to grow a crop next year. Even if not, just for truly giant Marigolds it was all worth it.
 

Lastly here are several of my last LITFM Videos, we're nearing 30 videos and the possibility of releasing a full-on playlist.


One about Lemon Verbena.

This one is about Lemon Grass.

Lemon Balm is in the mix too.

Of course Lemon Thyme had to be in here.


With all that garden goodness covered this is the part of the blog where I have to advertise for the Fayetteville City Market. Now I know you readers probably don’t much like advertisements, but by booth at the City Market helps to cover the costs of running the test garden and literally maintains the Research & Development budget that is used to bring you the information that has made up the backbone of this blog. Also, as of the start of 2019, my booth can now process credit or debit cards thanks to the acquisition of s a Square reader so your payment options have doubled. With that said, if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic vegetables, herbs and fruiting shrubs come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm on Saturdays. Even in bad weather the market goes on though you might have to look for me under the ‘arches’ of the Transportation Museum’s front entryway.

Plants & Stuff Available Now:
 
Food Plants:
Okra, Baby Bubba: $3.00
Peanuts, African Runner: $3.00

Herbs:
Herb, Basil – Eritrean: $3.00
Herb, Basil – Holy: $3.00
Herb, Cuban Oregano – Cerveza & Lime: $3.00
Herb, Horehound: $3.00
Herb, Oregano, Italian: $3.00
Herb, Roselle – Thai Red: $3.00
Herb, Thyme – English: $3.00

Herb, Horehound, 5" pot: $4.00
Herb, Oregano, 6” pot: $5.00
Herb, Italian Oregano, 5” pot: $4.00
Herb, Bristol Cross Oregano –  6” Pot: $5.00
Herb, Sage,  5" pot: $4.00
Herb, Shiso, 5" pot $5.00
Herb, English Thyme, 5" pot:$4.00


Ornamental Plants:
Cotton, Erlene’s Green: $3.00
Cotton,  Mississippi Brown Lint: $3.00
Cotton , Red Foliated White: $3.00
Marigold, Pineapple Crush: $3.00
Marigold, Signet Red: $3.00
Zinnia, Golden Star: $3.00

Milkweed, Hairy Balls: $4.00
Rudbeckia, Prarie Glow: $4.00

Coming Soon:
[TBA]

Due to the current Covid-19 situation and the state’s requirement that all citizens are not to gather in groups of more than ten, the weekly Sustainable neighbors meeting is online. Please check the sustainable neighbors Meetup.com page for more info about how to attend our online meeting.

https://www.meetup.com/SustainableNeighbors/

Since our meetings have an open-door policy you don’t need to sign up for anything or join anything, you can come on in and join the meetings. If not, you can always send me questions through this blog or visit the farmer’s market. This brings to a close the thirteenth LITFM post of 2020; stay tuned the next episode which should be posted on the 24th of July. There will be more garden updates and other cool stuff.