nittygrittydirtdigger
Deeply Rooted
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2009
- Messages
- 281
- Reaction score
- 10
- Points
- 141
This year I learned how truly easy it is to get sweet potato slips from a store-bought organic sweet potato. I also learned that, while the now-long vines are very pretty streaming along the kitchen window sill, that does not net me any yummy sweet potatoes. Next year, plant 'em!
I learned that spaghetti squash grow like weeds in the place where I planted them, and they taste good both as a spaghetti noodle substitute and as a baked squash with butter and salt and pepper.
I learned that 5 75' long rows of sunflowers planted in stair step fashion can grow into an astonishing display, even though nothing was done except an occasional watering. The chickens will reap the benefits of that little experiment this winter, after we get our share of the seeds of course. :coolsun
And I learned that tilling soil that has been left untouched for five years can product a crop of clover that cannot be kept down no matter how hard I try. I also learned that an organic garden overrun with white Dutch clover is a magnet for bumble bees, honey bees, lady bugs, dragon flies, preying mantis and earthworms. I've got my fingers crossed that tilling in all that nitrogen-rich clover will be as great a benefit to the soil as I've read it will be. :bee
So......what have you learned this gardening season?
I learned that spaghetti squash grow like weeds in the place where I planted them, and they taste good both as a spaghetti noodle substitute and as a baked squash with butter and salt and pepper.
I learned that 5 75' long rows of sunflowers planted in stair step fashion can grow into an astonishing display, even though nothing was done except an occasional watering. The chickens will reap the benefits of that little experiment this winter, after we get our share of the seeds of course. :coolsun
And I learned that tilling soil that has been left untouched for five years can product a crop of clover that cannot be kept down no matter how hard I try. I also learned that an organic garden overrun with white Dutch clover is a magnet for bumble bees, honey bees, lady bugs, dragon flies, preying mantis and earthworms. I've got my fingers crossed that tilling in all that nitrogen-rich clover will be as great a benefit to the soil as I've read it will be. :bee
So......what have you learned this gardening season?