The cost of produce
I went to Kroger's last night (a large U.S. grocery store chain) and
saw what they were selling as "elephant garlic". The heads were smaller than my 7 year old's fist, and the price was $7.00 PER! I guess I know what to grow for the farmers' market next year... Mark |
The cost of produce
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The cost of produce
Be careful with the Elephant Garlic, Many growers send these to market
because they can obtain a very large size in the blink of an eye. However, when you compare elephant garlic to other garlic's they have very little taste to them. Growing can be a challenge to say the least. If you start with seed sown directly into the garden plot, more times than not; you will end up in a race with root rot. I avoid this by starting all my garlic and onion seed in flats prior to placing into the soil. When your seedlings are doing good, select the ones with the largest leaf (greens and stems). Many people are left wondering why they get such small cloves at the end of their growing season. The early start helps greatly. The better the leaf growth is, the larger the clove will be in the end. Though the growing challenge is far from over! Garlic does not compete well with other plants. I use companion planting but must be very careful which companions I plant them with. Keep this in mind if you companion plant---don't put it with the fast and vigorous growers. Personally, I grow a great deal of things on topiary fencing which I have built so that I don't have to worry as much with the competition of some of my plants. My whole garden is surrounded with the 4"x4" square meshing. In this I fashion a fence which is 50' long x 4' tall x 12" deep. Supported this with untreated bamboo stakes every 4'. We leave the bamboo stakes long and drilled holes in the tops to run garden twine through to create a bit of an umbrella with vining beans. Bottom layer of moss. Work your way up the meshing one square at a time by pushing the moss to the outside and filling the inside with compost and soil. The moss remains on the outside while the soil is snuggled on the inside. I leave my tops open and grow rooted vegetables like radish, carrot, sections of garlic and onion. In the sides I plant (decorative shapes) lettuce of many colors and varieties. Last year we did a Celtic design which ended up beautiful. Kind of like taking the maze garden off the floor and moving it to the wall if you will. The garlic was the best crop last year I have ever had. Not to mention the lettuce was FANTASTIC---I couldn't keep up and was taking it to everyone I knew. If your space is limited, try a topiary fencing. The cost for the live fence, All Supplies were around $65 per 50' section, for everything needed,( stakes, mesh, moss, extra soil) , but I will be able to re-use it again this year with no problems. This year I will re-enforce one end with untreated 2x4s so that I can add a gate and extend the fencing. Anyhow, the Garlic loved this and the chive varieties grew fantastic out of the sides, not the top and added an almost "frilly ribbon" look to the whole thing. In the past I have been a big fan of chicken wire, but my son's new dog is not almost fully grown and the bugger tops 140 pounds---needless to say, that chicken wire no matter how tight it was-----Moose would manage to bend the dickens out of it and made it quite ugly to look at. He didn't touch the topiary barrier at all (perhaps he didn't like all the hot peppers growing on it) As Garlic is prone to many diseases make sure you rotate your garlic around. Have fun most of all! Timber www.timberslodge.net ....a Step Through Time "Mark" wrote in message om... I went to Kroger's last night (a large U.S. grocery store chain) and saw what they were selling as "elephant garlic". The heads were smaller than my 7 year old's fist, and the price was $7.00 PER! I guess I know what to grow for the farmers' market next year... Mark |
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