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Old 09-03-2015, 11:52 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

Lurker I'd grant you... Troll I'd take exception to. I have posted, but it has been years. I continued to follow the group through its ups and downs, gardening the whole time with every year different than the one prior. FWIW, I've been gardening and preserving my own food for as long add I can remember. Love it, don't mind a good debate either, just didn't think this was the place for it.

Wasn't really trying to poke the bear, either. Just wanted to avoid what I've seen so many times over the years. I do find it interesting that it's the same characters who get their dander up every time someone cares to disagree with something someone said.

So keep going with the insults and inflammatory remarks (speaking to both sides here). Watch the traffic fall off again. Then some new folks will come along in a few months and we can do it all over again.
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Old 10-03-2015, 12:15 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

what do you normally grow? where abouts are you?


songbird
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Old 10-03-2015, 01:07 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

I'm in the inland northwest. Far different than the coastal areas or western valleys. The Cascade Mountains stop most of the rain so we only average about 12" per year, most of that occurring in the fall and winter when the prevailing winds shift slightly to bring the weather in around the mountains. We get four distinct seasons, with the summers betting very hot and dry, so irrigation is critical, and very little water is wasted. Winters are normally just a few degrees below freezing, although we have dropped to double-digit negatives a few times.

I grow quite a variety of stuff. Plenty of paste tomatoes every year to put up sauces (spaghetti, salsa, and whatever else inspires me), so plenty of peppers and other stuff to go into the sauces too. Because of the heat, blossom end rot can be troublesome at times. I grow my own herbs to use well.. In fact, everything I use in my preserving I grow myself or buy from someone local.

I also grow a lot of winter squash and root crops that I keep through the winter. One of the happiest memories I have is making borscht for the first time and finding that the family loved it! It's the only reason I'm allowed to grow beets now (although I do sneak in a batch of pickles every year).. Speaking of pickles, I also grow cukes to make hot dill pickles and my grandmothers lime pickle that are so crunchy and sweet.

We have an assortment of fruit trees and vines and bushes that we freeze, dry, or otherwise preserve. I made Concorde grape pie filling 2 years ago for the first time and even though it's difficult, it will be made every year from now on. So delicious!

I grow fingerling potatoes and leeks. I dont generally grow other potatoes or onions because those are readily available around here at a price lower than I could ever grow them for. Many times you can find a grower that will let you go into the fields after they've harvested them and pick what's left and that price is hard to beat. Sweet corn is available for a nickel an ear when its in season, so I don't grow that either, but I do grow popcorn and the kids think that's a blast

In finishing up some of what's left in the cellar, I just made a couple more batches of red onion jam. So good on roasts, hamburgers, or whatever. This is also one that gets made every year.

There's a lot more that goes on around here, but perhaps I'll share more as time goes on.
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Old 10-03-2015, 01:38 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

On Monday, March 9, 2015 at 5:15:42 PM UTC-7, songbird wrote:
what do you normally grow? where abouts are you?


songbird



I'm in the inland northwest. Far different than the coastal areas or western valleys. The Cascade Mountains stop most of the rain so we only average about 12" per year, most of that occurring in the fall and winter when the prevailing winds shift slightly to bring the weather in around the mountains. We get four distinct seasons, with the summers betting very hot and dry, so irrigation is critical, and very little water is wasted. Winters are normally just a few degrees below freezing, although we have dropped to double-digit negatives a few times.

I grow quite a variety of stuff. Plenty of paste tomatoes every year to put up sauces (spaghetti, salsa, and whatever else inspires me), so plenty of peppers and other stuff to go into the sauces too. Because of the heat, blossom end rot can be troublesome at times. I grow my own herbs to use well.. In fact, everything I use in my preserving I grow myself or buy from someone local.

I also grow a lot of winter squash and root crops that I keep through the winter. One of the happiest memories I have is making borscht for the first time and finding that the family loved it! It's the only reason I'm allowed to grow beets now (although I do sneak in a batch of pickles every year).. Speaking of pickles, I also grow cukes to make hot dill pickles and my grandmothers lime pickle that are so crunchy and sweet.

We have an assortment of fruit trees and vines and bushes that we freeze, dry, or otherwise preserve. I made Concorde grape pie filling 2 years ago for the first time and even though it's difficult, it will be made every year from now on. So delicious!

I grow fingerling potatoes and leeks. I dont generally grow other potatoes or onions because those are readily available around here at a price lower than I could ever grow them for. Many times you can find a grower that will let you go into the fields after they've harvested them and pick what's left and that price is hard to beat. Sweet corn is available for a nickel an ear when its in season, so I don't grow that either, but I do grow popcorn and the kids think that's a blast

In finishing up some of what's left in the cellar, I just made a couple more batches of red onion jam. So good on roasts, hamburgers, or whatever. This is also one that gets made every year.

There's a lot more that goes on around here, but perhaps I'll share more as time goes on.

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Old 10-03-2015, 10:01 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

On 10/03/2015 11:15 AM, songbird wrote:
what do you normally grow? where abouts are you?


LOL. Love the snippage.



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Old 11-03-2015, 01:49 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

Fran Farmer wrote:
songbird wrote:


what do you normally grow? where abouts are you?


LOL. Love the snippage.


i hate having to reformat google groups posts...




songbird
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Old 10-03-2015, 12:54 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

On 09 Mar 2015, snotbottom wrote in
rec.gardens:

Lurker I'd grant you... Troll I'd take exception to.


You might be taken more seriously if you learned to quote who you're
replying to. As it is, your contextless posts make no sense.

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Old 10-03-2015, 01:14 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

On Monday, March 9, 2015 at 5:54:49 PM UTC-7, Nil wrote:
On 09 Mar 2015, snotbottom snotbottom wrote in
rec.gardens:

Lurker I'd grant you... Troll I'd take exception to.


You might be taken more seriously if you learned to quote who you're
replying to. As it is, your contextless posts make no sense.



Yeah. Just noticed the mobile version of Google groups doesn't quote the post you're replying to. Sorry about that.
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Old 10-03-2015, 01:18 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Gardening and climate change

On 09 Mar 2015, snotbottom wrote in
rec.gardens:

On Monday, March 9, 2015 at 5:54:49 PM UTC-7, Nil wrote:

You might be taken more seriously if you learned to quote who
you're replying to. As it is, your contextless posts make no
sense.


Yeah. Just noticed the mobile version of Google groups doesn't
quote the post you're replying to. Sorry about that.


Thank you.
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