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Our garden is a mess after being gone for pretty much July. Great tomatoes, peppers, kale is ok but struggling with crab grass, as are the collards and cabbages.
Wonder what the Irish ate before the potato was introduced to Europe ? Dusty
The Welsh. Tasty!
I stuck my fingers down where a potato vine had just wilted off and grabbed a handful of Yukon Gold potatoes. They're the same size and color, etc as store-bought. As 'new' (not seasoned for skin toughness) they cut easily into fries. The interior has that yellow tint that gives them their name. The fries cook up perfectly -- crispy crust and soft inside. I added them to a plate of fresh 'butt cheeks for some superb fish and chips. You can't beat Alaska home-grown.
OK then , what did the Italians eat before the tomato was proven to be edible to the inhabitants of Europe ? Dusty
as a pretty serious gardener... I never bother with potatoes and hardly with onions... The only onions I plant are to pick as spring onions... but no growing to maturity, seasoning, and storing for me.... Thats two items that are too cheap at the grocer to take up valuable garden space, plus potatoes are lot of work!I have grown small batches of specialty/heirloom potatoes using the tire stack method.. but a significant crop? no thanks.
Are you kidding? Potatoes have to be one of the easiest things to grow. The hardest part is digging them up fast enough to eat them before they either get too big or too many.
^^^^ yep. And I'll add another. Corn. Takes way too much space and labor. You can buy sweet corn at farmer's stands for practically nothing.
Just goes to show. In my opinion, you cannot beat the flavor of corn where you already have the water boiling when you pull the ears off the stalk. Shuck it, silk it, into the pot, and you're eating it 12 minutes after it was picked.You just can't do that with corn bought from a stand. Stale old stuff was probably picked yesterday or even the day before. Besides which, we don't even have many farmer's produce stands around here. Except for Saturday morning in the town Farmer's Market, there just aren't any.Corn's my favorite in the garden for that reason. Tomatoes - same reason as yours!!LannisForgot. I live in corn country. Fresh corn? No problemo..
Potatoes hard to grow? Sheesh. Just get them into the ground.
So, which of the steps that I laid out above do you skip, in growing potatoes? Maybe I'm doing too much ....Lannis
Bees, or lack thereof caused a tremendous loss of productivity in our garden. Squash went bust, ditto beans. My brother in NC had same problem. Our honey bees are almost gone.