Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007

/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #141  
we have wild blackberries here too.....they are big and taste excellent this year. just ripening now.
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #142  
Volfandt said:
What I find to be even more dramatic is when we do finally get a good steady rain, the garden responds almost immediately and seems to grow faster than when watered w/city water.

From what I have read, thunder and lightning storms have an extremely fertile effect on lawn and gardens. The plants green up as a result of electrically charged oxygen that is turned into 78% nitrogen.
______________

Jinman, It's incredible the amounts of rain you've been getting. I think Txdon is pleased to know you can grow lots of weeds too. :rolleyes:

Don
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #143  
After a long hot day on the ranch, there's nothing more relaxing than camping out under a cooling canopy of Okra and playing tunes from the old west.....

Don
 

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/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #144  
From what I have read, thunder and lightning storms have an extremely fertile effect on lawn and gardens. The plants green up as a result of electrically charged oxygen that is turned into 78% nitrogen.
Well, real world results in my garden would tend to agree with you :D

Yesterday morning I noticed the Silver Queen has started to silk, which seems to have brought out the Japanese beetles. After crushing a few by hand (I just don't like those terrorists) I applied my 1st application of liquid sevin to the silks in hopes of getting them early and not having to do any more applications.
But as fate would have it, the rains have finally arrived so I'll make another application before we head off on a short sojourn to beach tomorrow. Hopefully all will be well when I get back.

That okra looks like it's doing well. Must like the cowboy serenaide :D
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #145  
Volfandt said:
That okra looks like it's doing well. Must like the cowboy serenaide :D

Oh, give me a home,
Where the deer and rabbit’s roam
But they leave my garden alone.
Where seldom is heard,
that discouraging word (raccoon).
And the skies are not raining for days.

Oh, Home on the range,
where insects bite all day.
How often at night,
when the heavens shine bright,
the insects feed voracious-leee.

Ohhh, Home on the range.......
Where the weeds grow with regular-ity,
With fresh grown tomatoes in site,
for that first of the season BLT night.
...and the skies are sunny for days.

Ohhhhhh......:D

Don


 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007
  • Thread Starter
#146  
YODEL-AY-HE-HOOO...:rolleyes:

On another site, I read where a local sheriff mistook okra for a certain 9-lobed leaf crop grown for smokin'. The owner discovered the sherriff cutting down plants in his garden and had a hard time convincing him it wasn't wacky tobacky.:D
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #147  
jinman said:
YODEL-AY-HE-HOOO...:rolleyes:

On another site, I read where a local sheriff mistook okra for a certain 9-lobed leaf crop grown for smokin'. The owner discovered the sherriff cutting down plants in his garden and had a hard time convincing him it wasn't wacky tobacky.:D

did he have a warrent?

id sue!

(but for the record, i did think the above pic of okra was canabus.... did a double take there for a second)
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #149  
I read where a local sheriff mistook okra for a certain 9-lobed leaf crop grown for smokin'

That sheriff must have come from up north where they don't grow okra.:D
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007
  • Thread Starter
#150  
TBDonnelly said:
Found Yellow Gold today.....and yes.......m r Okra. :D

Don

Don, you should pick that okra before it gets too long and tough. I like pods that are 3-1/2" to 4" for frying and 1-1/2" to 2" for boiling.

Lately, we just can't keep up with the cucumbers, tomatoes, and cantaloupes. The melons went from green to ripe overnight it seems and now I have over 20 in my garage attracting fruit flys. I'm eating all I can and trying to give away the rest, but melons add up in a hurry. Maybe this weekend I'll get some pictures. Today, I'm taking 1/2 dozen melons to my daughter and that doesn't make a dent in the pile. :rolleyes:
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #152  
Pretty interesting machine, Dave. I've never actually seen one in person and would like to know more about it; just how it works and what it does.
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #153  
Hey Mr. Hollywood, good news story on your organic garden and good video of the tractor and potato digger in action! A TBN gem.:)
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007
  • Thread Starter
#154  
David, great job! Bird's a TBN Super Star, so maybe you could be our TBN Movie Star.:D :D

That's a very nice video. The TV crew did a great job of showing your digger in action. I even liked the idea that the reporter dressed appropriately to go into the field.

Now that reminds me...I still have a couple of rows of potatoes to dig. :rolleyes:
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #155  
Bird said:
Pretty interesting machine, Dave. I've never actually seen one in person and would like to know more about it; just how it works and what it does.

I cannot speak for all of the diggers out there, but the one that I have is a three point attachment rather than pull type, the way a lot of them are. It has a PTO driven pump which turns the chain. The front is about a foot of light steel to dig into the ground and the rest is the chain. The chain takes everything out, the dirt, the drip line and the potatoes, and drops them off of the back. The chain pitch on mine is only one inch as I like it to pick up the small potatoes which are good sellers through Labor Day. As you can tell, the soil in my garden is quite heavy and with the moisture in it, comes up in chunks. With the right pitch for the soil and a lighter soil, the dirt would all fall through the chain and the only thing coming out of the back would be the drip line, if installed in the row, and the potatoes After the digger is done, a person has to go through the row and find the potatoes, that is the tough part and usually falls upon my wife. This is still a better method than digging all of those potatoes by hand. This year we cut back and only planted about four acres.

There are more sophisticated models out there where they take the potatoes up to a trailer or a sorting platform to be sorted. This type of operation involves a lot more initial cost and more people to run. This particular one was about three thousand delivered.
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007
  • Thread Starter
#156  
This is "small potatoes" compared to your operation, David, but here is our one-day tomato harvest this morning. Also our cucumbers and shelled peas. We are going to can tomatoes tomorrow morning and freeze the peas. We'll find somebody to give the cucumbers to since we have a big bag in the refrigerator.

BTW: Our refrigerator is full of tomatoes and containers of sliced cantaloupe. Guess what I'm eating most of the time.:)
 

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/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #157  
That sure is a mess of tomatoes, Jim.:D By the way, the corn at our Walmart has gone from $.33 an ear to $.25 now. But cantaloupes went from $1.50 to $1.88.
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #158  
i sold 120 lbs of maters at the farmers market today. $3 a pound. organically grown. its still early for them here. also some broccoli, eggplant, cauliflower and squash. wish i had your pile Jim in addition to what i had. people around here are so desperate for vine ripened.
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #159  
Jim,

Thats a wonderful bunch of tomatoes you have there. I will be picking my first tomato tommarow morning to eat with breakfast. Picked a couple of cherry tomatoes but I don't count those. My wife can't wait to can tomatoes and make salsa. She is burnt out on beans and zuchinni.

Ray
 
/ Jim Inman's (jinman) Garden - 2007 #160  
Jim

Those tomatoes would sell out her in an hour. Being in ND, we do not have the outdoor tomatoes for a while yet. Mine will especially late as we had to much rain in May and I could not get the mulch down and the plants out when I wanted to, there are starting to blossom now.

The only tomatoes in the market are greenhouse grown, the one being grown in the ground in the greenhouse, he has good tomatoes. The other are grown by hydro phonics, had one of those today, on the sour side and not that good, the ones I get at Walmart are better.

The good news is that I will have corn in less than two weeks.
 

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