Thread: Easter Sunday
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Old 28-03-2016, 03:21 AM posted to rec.gardens.edible
George Shirley[_3_] George Shirley[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2014
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Default Easter Sunday

On 3/27/2016 8:30 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
George Shirley wrote:
On 3/27/2016 2:04 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
George Shirley wrote:
Perused the garden a bit ago, the blueberries are setting fruit as
is the fig tree. Hopes of a good crop makes me smile. Lots of
bumble, mason, etc. bees are working the liriope, their favorite
flower in our gardens. I'm hoping they are visiting other plants as
well. Crowder peas and cucumbers are starting to produce the climbing
parts and all look healthy. They were given fish emulsion yesterday
so should do well. The blueberries were given the blueberry
fertilizer also. All the plants and seeded plants are up and going
well. Still a bit cool here in the morning but getting into the
seventies by noon and later. Summer will be here toot sweet as my
Cajun friends used to tell me.
The pear tree out front is loaded with baby pears and still
blooming. We are hoping for a bumper crop. I have visions of pear
jelly, pear sauce, sliced pears, and pears just to eat out of hand.

No work today as it is Easter Sunday, hope all are having a good
Easter.
George

I waited until today to plant trees because it was supposed to be
overcast ... it ain't , but I hadda get 'em in the ground . So I
spent most of the morning planting around 35 Loblolly (aka southern
yellow) pines and a dozen pecans . These are trees supplied by the
Arkansas Forest Service at a very low cost , average about 70 cents
per tree ... these are bare-root seedlings , average about a foot
tall . I bought the minimum of both species , 25 pecans and 50 pines
, and since that was more than I wanted I shared with the neighbor .

Sounds like a good deal Snag. I do know about Loblolly pine, SE Texas
is full of them. I grew up about a half mile from the first tree farm
in the US. Never been harvested yet as far as I know. It too, was
loblolly pine. If you're ever this way it's at the junction of I10
and Farm to Market Road 1136 in Orange Cty, TX.

How much bare land do you have left, seems you're always planting a
bunch of something?

George


Well , as just bare land not really that much . We do have power line
easements that I'm using for somewhere to plant bee stuff , but nothing that
can get very big . The pines were planted along the road as a future buffer
for noise and visibility . The woods between the house and the road is the
first place I cleaned up the dead/diseased trees for firewood . Makes for
more of our activities being visible especially during winter . The next
major planting will be buckwheat in one of the easements for both bee forage
and deer food . It just happens that one (or more) of the kitchen windows
will look out right on the area I'll be planting ...
I'll be setting out the seedlings I've started in the garden soon . I was
looking at the tomatoes yesterday and found major roots coming out of the
bottoms of the starter cells . The peppers aren't far behind .

Used to lease deer land in Central Texas, best buffer trees I saw were
Osage Orange. Originally they were planted as fence posts, darned things
will grow from a wet log almost immediately. We had a few on my
grandparent's place that I used to get the long limbs to make bows, then
down to the river to get river reed for arrows. Made my arrow heads out
of tin cans and the string from deer gut. Just like my ancestors is what
my Dad used to say. Had a lot of fun with those.

An uncle planted a small grove of yellow pines on his place in front of
my folks. His son and grandson and myself rode them like ponies when we
were small. Went back many years later and saw some strange pine trees,
about three feet up the trunk they were at a 45 degree angle, reckon
those pine ponies got bigger. Wish I had taken a picture or two but I
was already trespassing.

Beautiful day today, hope tomorrow is the same.