Brandywine Tomato. I set these three out about a week ago and they already have a couple inches of new growth on them. The one bad thing about Brandywine's is that they take a long time to mature and they don't produce prolifically like genetically engineered versions most people around here grow. However, the divine tomato-i-ness of the Brandywine is worth the wait. (NOTE: These pictures get HUGE if you click on them)
My green beans, lima beans and purple hull peas have finally broken through the soil.
YUMMY! I could eat my weight in purple hull peas and lima beans. I love green beans too if they are fried down in a skillet with some onion and a large piece of fat back...just like MeMaw used to make.
Bush green beans. One day these were no where to be seen and the next they were 2 inches tall. I hope they produce as well as they grow.
The first Purple Hull Peas
The first Lima Bean.
A close up of the pole green beans in the mound.
Bean, corn & squash mound. For those of you who might be wondering why all of this is planted in a mound...this is the way that Native Americans used to grow these particular veggies. The beans run up the corn and the squash keeps the roots shaded. Very efficient for a lazy gardner.
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19 hours ago
2 comments:
Hmmm... Like the mound idea.
I once heard that Indians buried fish among their crops for their fertilizer. An old German doctor near where I grew up had a fish pond in the center of his garden to raise fish for fertilizing his crops.
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