lakngulf
Veteran Member
Corn looks great, Dennis. I am couple of weeks out yet.
Bolero (F1) (Pelleted) - Johnny's Selected SeedsI have not tried pelleted carrot seed, didn't even think about it being available. I am guilty of not thinning carrots too, which is really pathetic given how small our growing is.The raised bed soil/medium is pretty fluffy. The carrots do suffer a bit if not thinned but it's not a disaster.
Nice looking corn. The only way I'll enjoy that for a while will be from the local grocery store.Picking corn today. 1st row gave up 3 -5 gallon buckets!
2nd photo was "quality control" and it PASSED :up:
[<snip photos>]
<img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/files/rural-living/378639-how-does-your-garden-grow-006-jpg"/>
After I staked and wove the tomatoes I plowed the newest peas{brown crowders}. This store bought plow has me spoiled. It pretty much goes where you point it.
Larro
Yeah, I have seen those but thought they were intended to be antique replicas, never really thought about using one in my garden. Looks like it works well.




Well, last year I fought the raccoons for the corn, and we split 50/50. This year they are not even waiting for the ears to get ripe. They are wiping me out.
Dave, I love your underground house. If I ever build again, I would like something like that. We have plenty of hot and cold weather here in NW Florida, and I'm sure it would safe lots of energy over the lifetime of the house. I don't wish anything bad to happen to my house, but if it did, I would either go underground or with the Styrofoam blocks filled with concrete. And other than a small basement, it would be one story. I can go a month at a time without going upstairs here.
Larro
We like our house. It's really like a walk-out basement with no house above it. I have no idea how well that would work in your climate. My guess is you would want less glass and less thermal mass, plus a lot more attention to forced air exchange, AC and humidity control. They make some pricey but nice ERV units for air exchange with heat recovery based on a ducted system.
Our previous house was 2-1/2 stories, about 3000 sq ft. It needed a riding vacuum cleaner. :laughing: Seriously, keeping a house that size clean is a lot of hours. We decided to downsize and go for energy efficiency to stretch retirement budgets.
Our house is optimized more for long, cold winters than summer warmth. We may have over done that a bit. Winter heat is no issue, but hot and humid weather was a bit outside it's best performance. Today I posted pics of our new mini-split units in the Good Morning thread. I think those units are what we needed for summer.



Dave, I love your underground house. If I ever build again, I would like something like that. We have plenty of hot and cold weather here in NW Florida, and I'm sure it would safe lots of energy over the lifetime of the house. I don't wish anything bad to happen to my house, but if it did, I would either go underground or with the Styrofoam blocks filled with concrete. And other than a small basement, it would be one story. I can go a month at a time without going upstairs here.
Larro
There's probably a dozen sites in Maine where you can dig deep enough to do that without either hitting ledge or building below the water table... Dave scoffed up one of them.![]()
:thumbsup: