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  chokecherry question; How I come to love chokecherry         


Author: Archimedes Plutonium
Date: Jul 31, 2008 13:56

For years now I have complained about chokecherry as not being suitable
for canning and not suitable for harvesting since the fruit is so small
and pits so large and in fact poisonous if enough swallowed. So
chokecherry was on the borderline of practicallity.

So what changed my mind so abruptly? Well it is because I can utilize
the juice of chokecherry for other canned fruits and then save the
mashed up chokecherry, put in refrigerator and use my mouth and tongue
to separate out the pits. Carry around a small spittoon and so fully
utilize the cherry in the chokecherry.

If you ever seen the juice of chokecherry it is very pretty purple-red.

And the flavor of chokecherry is a good cherry flavor. So when sour
cherries are not available, chokecherry is a good substitute. And they
are easy to pick and easy to prep.

However I have a question about picking chokecherry. Maybe someone knows
what this is. The chokecherry come in what I call "drupes of fruit". And
I noticed on some drupes as if a whitish appearance, sort of like a
spider type webbing. Maybe it is some worm type webbing. It seems to
cover an entire drupe of chokecherries.

So what is this whitish film on chokecherries? Anyone know?
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1 Comment
  apple harvest and canning; good news and bad news         


Author: Archimedes Plutonium
Date: Jul 31, 2008 13:46

Well apples and pears usually are the bulk of my canning, especially
with cinnamon applesauce. But this year the pears are few, for them
seem to be biennal in production capacity. One year huge, next year
sparse.

The apples are large production this year however, due to hores, llama
and alpaca, I am having to compete for apples. I normally just pick up
fallen apples on the ground, but these animals are cleaning me out
before I get there. And the horse especially. The horse seems to know
what trees are apple trees and makes them the priority rounds of the day.

But there is good news about apple canning. I will have more than enough
apples to can. The bad news is that 75 percent is going to have to be
crabapples. Not much fun in prepping crab apples. But one thing good
about crabapples is that the color of their skin can tell you if ripe
enough.

As for the regular apples, I pick the fallen to the ground ones and
depending on their color I either wait till ripened or cann immediately.
I am adding currants and chokecherry juice to the apples so it is quite
a delicious mix.

All organic.
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1 Comment
  Fertigation         


Author: sniper8commander
Date: Jul 31, 2008 02:09

Hello,

anybody out there knows about using the fertigation way direct to the
soil (not in poly-bags). Size of land 2 acres using to be a rice
field. Any example with pictures of successfull farmers using this
method. How did he do it? I want to grow vegetables.

Advice are wellcome.

Thank you.
no comments
  do better for next year-- asparagus, watermelon, tomatoes, lettuce seeds, grapes         


Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: Jul 28, 2008 22:19

My biggest two problems are asparagus and watermelon for next year for
this year was failures in both.

Asparagus-- harvesting is fine and great. Trouble is when mid summer
rolls around and the asparagus
stalks are falling over to the ground and a hassle in trying to mow
around. So what have to do next year
to solve this problem is once the harvesting is ended, I place a big
enough tomato cage over the spears
so that they grow into the wire cage and the cage keeps them upright
throughout the summer.
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2 Comments
  New Produced Luxury Residence - Classified Preview 2008/11         


Author: Mutual Assets
Date: Jul 27, 2008 20:59

28 Juli, 05:12

Title: Munifus Landmark Estate â„¢ House Manufacturing Worldwide
Project
Contracting

City:
Stockholm, London, Moscow, Los Angeles, Washington, New York, Miami,
Chicago, Austin, Tokyo, Jordan, Yemen, Oslo, Helsinki, Berlin,
Vienna,
Bejing, Istanbul, Alger, Gibraltar, Monte Carlo, Paris, Brussels,
Amsterdam, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Zurich, Barcelona, Madrid,

State:
NON-US

Description:
Munifus Landmark Estate â„¢ represents a building-contractor located in
many of the most beautiful and highly attractive locations around the
world. The following represents a detailed description...
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  horse fascination with windows         


Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: Jul 26, 2008 23:26

I have seen this behaviour now with turkey, guinea fowl and most of
all a lonely horse.

Perhaps it is cruel to have a horse by itself for they are social
animals and need the feeling
of a group.

I keep a horse with a llama so they are not too lonely.

But I notice that the horse spends most of the time next to a window
where he sees his
reflection in the glass.

I noticed this behaviour by other animals. I think it is instinct of
social animals.

So what I recommend for farmers or others who have animals that are
alone, is
to have a window where their animal can stand up against and see
themselves
in the window (or even better a mirror).
Show full article (1.24Kb)
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  What about african agriculture and discussion boards about it?         


Author: TTT TTT
Date: Jul 26, 2008 07:41

I've noted are only very few boards about agriculture in Africa so I
think I could make something useful promoting web boards about African
agriculture and farming, like this:
http://www.agrolinker.co.uk/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.pl?board=6

What I find very interesting is they publish news in the forum about
agriculture in Africa and I like to be updated about this 'unusual' kind
of agricultural issues, particularly because to Africa are usually
related, by the medias, very different and 'opposite' issues (for
example biotech in Africa, or beekeeping and organic agriculture in Africa).

It sound me strange this usual mix I find when I search for news about
african agriculture but I think, trying to understand, that there are
lot of interests around agriculture and farming in this continent.
You can easily note that there are countries where evironment is so
clean and other that are testing biotech crops. This looks to me very
amazing!

So I think could be very interesting to talk and understand the reasons
of it, the intentions of the agro-policies makers, the forecast about
the future of agriculture in this country and the consequences for this
continent of the Doha round.
Show full article (1.44Kb)
no comments
  Re: Pre-existent "entities" ruining our lives???         


Author:
Date: Jul 23, 2008 06:45

On Tue, 22 Jul 2008 19:34:32 GMT, Dutch email.com> wrote:
>dh@. wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 21 Jul 2008 20:28:52 GMT, Dutch email.com> wrote:
>>
>>> dh@. wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Thu, 17 Jul 2008 19:29:55 GMT, Dutch email.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> The Logic of the Larder...
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16 Comments
  just u click earn more doller         


Author: usha
Date: Jul 22, 2008 04:46

no comments
  grapes the wine of fruit, then buffaloeberry the champagne or spice of fruit         


Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: Jul 21, 2008 23:46

Usually when I can my organic grown fruit, I have some leftover
portions that are too small for a pint
so I wait for it to cool down and pour into a container and save for
the morning to eat as a chilled
fruit, often slicing a banana with it.

Well this mixture of currants, gooseberries (another type of
currant), a few sour cherries and
buffaloeberries is a real winner. If you never had buffaloeberry
before, well, you are in for a treat.
They are tiny red berries that taste like lemons. really powerful
flavor. Sort of leave a good aftertaste.
So the combination of the buffaloberry and currants is a sensational
mixture of fruit. I have to add
about twice as much sugar as for real sour cherries.
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