Showing posts with label Winter Annual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter Annual. Show all posts

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Don't Get Me Down, Grass!

Welcome back to the Lost In the Farmer’s Market blog. As some of you have noticed the blog has taken on a more formal instructional tone to cover the wide variety of forage foods that you can find all around you. This change came about due to the events of the pandemic, economic turmoil and other factors. The reality is that we are surrounded with perfectly edible plants that can fill at least some of the void in our dietary needs but, there is a multi-million dollar herbicide industry that exists. It has always been in the interest of that industry to label certain things ‘weeds’ so they can sell you product that as time goes by we find out is worse for your health than the weeds are. Coupled with an Agricultural-Education system that peddles the myths of the industry and the old myth that if you can afford a nice lawn you must have wealth we have a population that has been fooled for a long time. So, here we are in 2023, and the forage foods series will continue. I hope all of you who read this blog find the information useful or at least thought provoking. The ‘weeds’ I am listing a certainly found in Zone 8A in North Carolina and should certainly be easy to find in the Southeast regions of America. Oh, and one funny thing discovered in last year’s blog, it turns out you can eat Crab Grass, and while it isn’t what most would call a lawn grass, I did state you can’t eat your lawn in last year’s intro. Detailed research is a funny thing since it has a way of proving even the experts wrong. 

 

 

 

Got to love these true urban photos, here is a specimen of Annual Blue grass with the fluffy tufts and as if to signify this is totally in a urban area a obligatory cigarette butt is right there. Please pick up your litter, kids.

 

 

Common Name: Annual Bluegrass

 

Other Common Names: Annual Meadow Grass

 

Botanical Family: Poaceae (The Grass Family)

 

Botanical Latin Name: Poa annua

 

Description & Habitat:  Annual Bluegrass is a tufted and sometimes clumped winter annual grass that has a world-wide distribution despite originally being native to Eurasia. In some locations it is considered an aggressive invasive. If you check bags of grass seed, especially cheap contractor mixes and grass seen that offers a fast greening it will probably contain this form of grass. You can identify Annual blue grass because it’s the greenest grass in the late winter early spring and it seems to have fluffy looking seed heads/flowering stalks. You will typically find this grass anywhere there is or was a lawn and it will appear with wild grasses in disturbed sites.

 

When & What to Harvest: Unknown, it’s listed as ‘Not Toxic’ to humans but that does not mean it’s safely edible.

 

Poisonous Lookalikes: None known.

 

Related Edible Species: Unknown.

 

Recipe: Not Applicable.

 

 

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.  In addition to being able to process card payments we now take CashApp payments so your payment options for my product have tripled. With that said; if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic fruit, herbs, flowers and perennials, come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 2:00 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.

 

 

For those of you wondering what plants are going to be at the market this weekend here is the list.

 

Fresh Produce:

Garlic Bulbs

Soup Kit – Parsnip

Soup Kit – Turnip

 

Coming Soon:

Spring Garden Plants are due in March 18th 2023.

 

How to stay in Contact with Us!

 

Our group’s online presence has migrated to Nextdoor.com. All you need to keep up with all our activities is to have a Nextdoor account and to look for the ‘Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville’ group and ask to join! You don’t have to live in Fayetteville to join us! Feel free to ask all your garden questions of our knowledgeable membership and post your cool garden pictures.

 

Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville

 

Also please take a gander at the YouTube version of this blog:

The Videos: Look Here

>Newest videos (1): Cat Grass

 

 

Meetings are still going on! We now meet at LeClair’s General Store on the First and Third Thursday of every month. Our next meeting is on March 16th between 5:30pm and 7:00pm. We are in the back room so come on in and join us for a fun garden chat.

 

Here's Looking at you, Venus Looking glass

 

Welcome back to the Lost In the Farmer’s Market blog. As some of you have noticed the blog has taken on a more formal instructional tone to cover the wide variety of forage foods that you can find all around you. This change came about due to the events of the pandemic, economic turmoil and other factors. The reality is that we are surrounded with perfectly edible plants that can fill at least some of the void in our dietary needs but, there is a multi-million dollar herbicide industry that exists. It has always been in the interest of that industry to label certain things ‘weeds’ so they can sell you product that as time goes by we find out is worse for your health than the weeds are. Coupled with an Agricultural-Education system that peddles the myths of the industry and the old myth that if you can afford a nice lawn you must have wealth we have a population that has been fooled for a long time. So, here we are in 2023, and the forage foods series will continue. I hope all of you who read this blog find the information useful or at least thought provoking. The ‘weeds’ I am listing a certainly found in Zone 8A in North Carolina and should certainly be easy to find in the Southeast regions of America. Oh, and one funny thing discovered in last year’s blog, it turns out you can eat Crab Grass, and while it isn’t what most would call a lawn grass, I did state you can’t eat your lawn in last year’s intro. Detailed research is a funny thing since it has a way of proving even the experts wrong. 

 

 

 

Typically in a urban environment you will find Venus Looking Glass emerging beside a building or between the cracks of pavement or asphalt.

It's bright blue-violet flowers are a good indicator that spring is near.

This is a specimen that appeared in the Vegetable patch at the test gardens.

 

 

Common Name: Venus Looking Glass

 

Other Common Names: Common Venus Looking Glass, Clasping Venus Looking Glass.

 

Botanical Family: Campanulaceae (The Bellflower Family)

 

Botanical Latin Name: Triodanis perfoliata

 

Description & Habitat:  Venus Looking Glass is a winter annual that has erect or ascending stems that branch freely at the plant’s base. An interesting feature of this plant is that it’s leaves clasp the stem and form little ‘cups’ that are borne in an alternate pattern on stems. Typically this plant is spotted due to its blue-violet flowers which have five petals and are quite visible. This plant reproduces by seed and is found all over North American and in Central and South America. This plant is native to North and South America but has also naturalized in China, Korea and Australia. You will typically find this plant in lawns, and in gardens but also in disturbed sites, open woods, grassy slopes, rocky outcrops, gravelly areas, roadsides and it seems to prefer poor quality sandy soils that are on the dry side.

 

When & What to Harvest:  Edibility is unknown for humans however some sours suggest cattle may eat it.

 

Poisonous Lookalikes: None known.

 

Related Edible Species: None Known

 

Recipe: Not Applicable.

 

 

 

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.  In addition to being able to process card payments we now take CashApp payments so your payment options for my product have tripled. With that said; if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic fruit, herbs, flowers and perennials, come on down to the Fayetteville City Market on 325 Maxwell Street in downtown Fayetteville between the Hours of 9:00 am and 2:00 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.

 

 

For those of you wondering what plants are going to be at the market this weekend here is the list.

 

Fresh Produce:

Garlic Bulbs

Soup Kit – Parsnip

Soup Kit – Turnip

 

Coming Soon:

Spring Garden Plants are due in March 18th 2023.

 

How to stay in Contact with Us!

 

Our group’s online presence has migrated to Nextdoor.com. All you need to keep up with all our activities is to have a Nextdoor account and to look for the ‘Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville’ group and ask to join! You don’t have to live in Fayetteville to join us! Feel free to ask all your garden questions of our knowledgeable membership and post your cool garden pictures.

 

Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville

 

Also please take a gander at the YouTube version of this blog:

The Videos: Look Here

>Newest videos (1): Cat Grass

 

Meetings still going on! We now meet at LeClair’s General Store on the First and Third Thursday of every month. Our next meeting is on March 16th between 5:30pm and 7:00pm. We are in the back room so come on in and join us for a fun garden chat.

 

 

 

Thursday, October 6, 2022

Love Her Madder

 

Welcome back to the Lost In the Farmer’s Market Blog. At the current time we have a long-running series that covers useful, edible and medicinal ‘weeds’ that you can commonly find in the southeastern states of the United States. While our survey area is just within Cumberland County North Carolina it’ is possible you can find some of these forage plants in other places. This series was begun to give folks a detailed look into the resources they might not have known were right there in their lawn. Given that the world situation is not that great and there are already shortages of critical grains and fertilizers forage foods may be the most useful answer on a local level. LITFM will keep this series going as long as we keep finding wild resources to photograph and write about. If you have any questions or comments about our articles please leave a comment either here or on our YouTube Channel (The link is at the end of the article). Thank you for reading, and remember just one thing, you can’t eat lawn grass.

 

 

 

[Because Blogspot is being dumb you can find the weed's picture over here at Imgur.]

 

 

Common Name: Blue Field Madder

 

Other Common Names: Field Madder

 

Botanical Family: Rubiaceae (The Coffee Family)

 

Botanical Latin Name: Sherardia arvensis

 

Season to Harvest: Most likely in the spring.

 

Habitat: Blue Field madder is most commonly found in fields in the southeast. You might also find it in pastures, and in lawns.

 

Parts to Harvest: Edibility is unclear, but the leaves and young stems are likely what you would want to harvest.

 

Poisonous Lookalikes: None.

 

Related Edible Species: Edibility is unclear.

 

Description: Blue Field Madder is a low growing mat forming kind of winter annual with square stems and a leaf arrangement that resembles Bedstraw (Galium aparine).  The Lavender to pink flowers and petite leaves distinguish it from Bedstraw. For note, its leaves are whorled with four to six leaves per node and the leaves are elliptic in shape and have pointy tips. The flowers can vary, are small and have four petals.

 

How to Harvest: Foliage presumably is harvested in the same way you would do for bedstraw.

 

Recipe: Given that it is noted in several sources that this plant is non-toxic, its edibility is unclear. It would be wise to use and prepare this plant as you would prepare Cleavers/ Bedstraw which is related but has known toxicity and edibility information.

 

 

 

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.  In addition to being able to process card payments we now take CashApp payments so your payment options for my product have tripled. With that said; if you want to get some GMO-free, Organic fruit, herbs, flowers and perennials, 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.

 

 

For those of you wondering what plants are going to be at the market this weekend here is the list.

 

Fresh Produce:

Peppers, Lemon Drop

Peppers, Fayetteville Inferno

Peppers, Sweet Heat & Purple Bell

Garlic Bulbs

Soup Kit – Parsnip

Soup Kit – Turnip

 

 

Garden Stuff: ($3.00)

Broccoli - Destiny

Brussel Sprouts - Redarling

Cauliflower – Snow Crown

Cauliflower – Flame Star

Cauliflower – Veronica

Celery - Tango

Cilantro – Vietnamese

Collards – Green Glaze

Cuban Oregano – Cervesa & Lime

Hoan Ngoc

Mizuna Mustard – Miz America

Mustard – Japanese Red Giant

Pak Choi – Rose’

Sage – Pineapple

 

 

Coming Soon:

House Plants (November)

 

 

 

How to stay in Contact with Us!

 

Our group’s online presence has migrated to Nextdoor.com. All you need to keep up with all our activities is to have a Nextdoor account and to look for the ‘Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville’ group and ask to join! You don’t have to live in Fayetteville to join us! Feel free to ask all your garden questions of our knowledgeable membership and post your cool garden pictures.

 

Sustainable Neighbors of Fayetteville

 

Also please take a gander at the Youtube version of this blog:

The Videos: Look Here

>Newest videos (3): Swamp Rose Hibiscus, Cotton Rose, Texas Star Hibiscus

 

Meetings still going on! We now meet at LeClair’s General Store on the First and Third Thursday of every month. Our next meeting is on October 20th between 5:30pm and 7:00pm. We are in the back room so come on in and join us for a fun garden chat.

 

*Song Reference: ‘Love her Madly by The Doors.