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#1
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Something Different to Plant?
I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes.
I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. |
#2
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Something Different to Plant?
brsher wrote:
I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. onions Carl -- to reply, change ( .not) to ( .net) |
#3
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Something Different to Plant?
brsher wrote:
I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. I gave it up. The Opposums, Racoons, Deer, Skunks, Rabbits, Gophers, Rats, Japanees Beetles,Coyotes and the neighbors Horses made me surrender. Prior to 25 years ago we got to harvest 1/3 of what we planted. The critters don't even mind the dogs or lights. Indeed my dog's best friends are Opposums. They eat out of his dish with him. Did I mention he's part Pit Bull. I might try again if I can ever afford a night security guard and enough insecticide to reapply every other day after the rain washes it off. |
#4
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Something Different to Plant?
On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher"
wrote: I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. hemp |
#5
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Something Different to Plant?
"brsher" wrote in message ... I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. Lettuce, chard, pak choi, carrots David |
#6
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Something Different to Plant?
On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 04:58:10 GMT, "David Hare-Scott"
wrote: "brsher" wrote in message ... I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. Lettuce, chard, pak choi, carrots David Baby spinach. There is NOTHING more ineffably ineffable than leaves of baby spinach rinsed wll and cooked with nothing but the water on the leaves (watch the pot!). A little lemon juice -- instant ambrosia. Persephone |
#7
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Something Different to Plant?
On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 03:14:31 GMT, Charles
wrote: On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher" wrote: I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. hemp Actually, he makes a good point -- sorta. People don't realize that hemp was used for so many things in ancient times -- clothing, sails, ropes, all kinds of products. Now, to get hemp clothing, we have to import from Canada! Ridiculous. Today, hemp could help alleviate the looming the oil crisis -- to the chagrin of the oilionnaires who are running this country. That's why it will take a long time, and a desperate world situation, before growing hemp will be "legalized" by our whores in Congress. Hemp oil could replace petroleum in automobiles and other uses. It grows on miserable soil; it needs no more care than a weed; it's a natural, renewable, non-polluting crop. Too good to be true? Not at all -- it's out there waiting... Persephone |
#8
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Something Different to Plant?
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message ... "brsher" wrote in message ... I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. Lettuce, chard, pak choi, carrots David Yeah...chard. Good all season. Big leaves cooked, baby ones in salads. To die for. |
#9
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Something Different to Plant?
Persephone wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 03:14:31 GMT, Charles wrote: On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher" wrote: I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. hemp Actually, he makes a good point -- sorta. People don't realize that hemp was used for so many things in ancient times -- clothing, sails, ropes, all kinds of products. Now, to get hemp clothing, we have to import from Canada! Ridiculous. Today, hemp could help alleviate the looming the oil crisis -- to the chagrin of the oilionnaires who are running this country. That's why it will take a long time, and a desperate world situation, before growing hemp will be "legalized" by our whores in Congress. Hemp oil could replace petroleum in automobiles and other uses. It grows on miserable soil; it needs no more care than a weed; it's a natural, renewable, non-polluting crop. Too good to be true? Not at all -- it's out there waiting... Persephone Yeah, but what's a home gardener supposed to do with it, other than the obvious, which would require sharing it with the police? |
#10
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Something Different to Plant?
Lettice, radishes and bush beans in the spring and cabbage and winter
radishes in the fall. that would give you a crop about year round. From Mel & Donnie in Bluebird Valley http://community.webtv.net/MelKelly/TheKids |
#11
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Something Different to Plant?
Persephone wrote:
On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 03:14:31 GMT, Charles wrote: On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher" wrote: I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. hemp Actually, he makes a good point -- sorta. People don't realize that hemp was used for so many things in ancient times -- clothing, sails, ropes, all kinds of products. Now, to get hemp clothing, we have to import from Canada! Ridiculous. Persephone In spite of all your so called "advantages" of growing hemp (and a lot of them are a real stretch, you appear to know next to nothing about petroleum in automobiles) you failed to advise that the grower may spend his summer (or longer) in jail. There isn't a summer that goes by that someone in my area who grows hemp (pot) is caught and goes to jail and/or is heavily fined. Some areas of the country are quite liberal and look the other way; some aren't and it isn't worth growing it if it is illegal to grow it in your area. And try getting a good job if you have been convicted of growing pot. It is not going to happen. -- Bill R. (Ohio Valley, U.S.A) Gardening Since 1969 For pictures of my garden flowers visit http://members.iglou.com/brosen Remove NO_WEEDS_ in e-mail address to reply by e-mail |
#12
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Something Different to Plant?
I took a spot and set up a fig grove. trees go into the heated garage in winter
(could be a basement too). http://weloveteaching.com/landscape/figs/figgrove.htm Ingrid "brsher" wrote: I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the recommendations I make. AND I DID NOT AUTHORIZE ADS AT THE OLD PUREGOLD SITE |
#13
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Something Different to Plant?
Persephone wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 03:14:31 GMT, Charles wrote: On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher" wrote: hemp Actually, he makes a good point -- sorta. People don't realize that hemp was used for so many things in ancient times -- clothing, sails, ropes, all kinds of products. Now, to get hemp clothing, we have to import from Canada! Ridiculous. Today, hemp could help alleviate the looming the oil crisis -- to the chagrin of the oilionnaires who are running this country. That's why it will take a long time, and a desperate world situation, before growing hemp will be "legalized" by our whores in Congress. Hemp oil could replace petroleum in automobiles and other uses. It grows on miserable soil; it needs no more care than a weed; it's a natural, renewable, non-polluting crop. But ya forgot the bestest most important reason for growing it .... "Pass the bong, dude!" |
#14
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Something Different to Plant?
On Thu, 9 Mar 2006 20:19:01 -0500, "Sgt.Sausage"
wrote: Persephone wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 03:14:31 GMT, Charles wrote: On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher" wrote: hemp Actually, he makes a good point -- sorta. People don't realize that hemp was used for so many things in ancient times -- clothing, sails, ropes, all kinds of products. Now, to get hemp clothing, we have to import from Canada! Ridiculous. Today, hemp could help alleviate the looming the oil crisis -- to the chagrin of the oilionnaires who are running this country. That's why it will take a long time, and a desperate world situation, before growing hemp will be "legalized" by our whores in Congress. Hemp oil could replace petroleum in automobiles and other uses. It grows on miserable soil; it needs no more care than a weed; it's a natural, renewable, non-polluting crop. But ya forgot the bestest most important reason for growing it .... "Pass the bong, dude!" Err...the smokeable stuff is not exactly the same as the clothes-sails-oil-paper, etc. stuff. Googling keywords "hemp vs marijuana" elicits many sites making that distinction, and explaining industrial uses of hemp. Sorry, dude! g Persephone |
#15
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Something Different to Plant?
On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 10:44:12 -0500, Bill R
wrote: Persephone wrote: On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 03:14:31 GMT, Charles wrote: On Wed, 8 Mar 2006 18:51:14 -0600, "brsher" wrote: I have a small garden. Every year I plant beefsteak and cherry tomatoes. I've also planted red peppers once or twice. But this year I'm looking for something different to plant. I live in Missouri. Can anyone suggest something that is easy to grow and that I can consume almost everyday? Thank you for your suggestions. hemp Actually, he makes a good point -- sorta. People don't realize that hemp was used for so many things in ancient times -- clothing, sails, ropes, all kinds of products. Now, to get hemp clothing, we have to import from Canada! Ridiculous. Persephone In spite of all your so called "advantages" of growing hemp (and a lot of them are a real stretch, you appear to know next to nothing about petroleum in automobiles) Err...people are running their automobiles on cleaned-up restaurant oils! WHO "knows next to nothing" about auto fuels? and you failed to advise that the grower may spend his summer (or longer) in jail. Why would I have to "advise", when everybody knows about persecuting pot growers, while subsidizing tobacco growers. Now *there's* a REALLY dangerous drug! There isn't a summer that goes by that someone in my area who grows hemp (pot) is caught and goes to jail and/or is heavily fined. Some areas of the country are quite liberal and look the other way; some aren't and it isn't worth growing it if it is illegal to grow it in your area. And try getting a good job if you have been convicted of growing pot. It is not going to happen. It's interesting to read the history of how industrial hemp became linked with "medicinal" marijuana, and criminalized. It was not always so. The fine hand of the automobile and oil industries can be discerned therein. Also the moralizing of 1930's bureaucratic fanatics, tinged with racism toward blacks. There have been quite a number of books written which detail that politically-motivated history. Dismaying. Confabulating industrial hemp -- one of the world's most ancient and useful commodities -- with "drug" marijuana is useful to the oil and auto industries, and to the moralizers who commit all kinds of evil themselves, but find it convenient to demonize others. Speaking of medical marijuana, I can think of nothing more hard-hearted than to deny a very sick, possibly terminal, patient the relief of using that natural "drug". Disclaimer: I don't use. Persephone |
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