Garden!!!!!!!!!!!!!

LBrandt

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Thread starter
Joined
Apr 3, 2016
Posts
10,987
Likes
1,750
Points
583
Location
SE ND
Always plant mine in part shade next to carrots and water often. Got a bumper crop this year and sold some of my first picking yesterday. LB
 


Davey Crockett

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Posts
14,258
Likes
1,710
Points
638
Location
Boondocks
It was beets that gave me determination needed to win the war against deer in the garden. We had a double row and they were an inch or less tall and deer cleaned them out. Gonna eat a lot more venison and a lot less beets this year.
 

LBrandt

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Thread starter
Joined
Apr 3, 2016
Posts
10,987
Likes
1,750
Points
583
Location
SE ND
It was beets that gave me determination needed to win the war against deer in the garden. We had a double row and they were an inch or less tall and deer cleaned them out. Gonna eat a lot more venison and a lot less beets this year.
If you ever get down this way I share some. LB
 

Twitch

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 14, 2015
Posts
2,539
Likes
582
Points
358
Location
Mandan
Lucky I had a bumper crop last year and canned a bunch. Peppers are starting to produce pretty good, although the hot hungarian wax are outpacing the jalapeños big time.
 

tikkalover

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 10, 2015
Posts
8,180
Likes
1,264
Points
533
Location
Minot
These are the only bees I have in my yard.
Wife has an 8 foot circular flower bed of moss roses and today I bet there was 30 of them in it.
They won’t go in the garden.

IMG_6692.jpeg

They are about 3/8 of an inch long
 


Davey Crockett

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Posts
14,258
Likes
1,710
Points
638
Location
Boondocks
That way here too, but it looks like there must be enough in the garden to make babies. I'm changing the layout of the garden this fall and thinking a small plot of pollinator flowers in the middle of the garden might help. Update on the peas that the deer ate, It wasn't the end of the peas like I thought . They grew back and ended up being the nicest row of Peas we've ever grown but they are a late crop , not quite ready yet. makes me want to take the weed whacker to part of a row next year to see if that can be duplicated. I'm excited for next year already , now that I can keep the deer out it's time for more fruit bearing trees/shrubs
 

BDub

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 26, 2015
Posts
2,325
Likes
202
Points
303
Location
Bismarck
That way here too, but it looks like there must be enough in the garden to make babies. I'm changing the layout of the garden this fall and thinking a small plot of pollinator flowers in the middle of the garden might help. Update on the peas that the deer ate, It wasn't the end of the peas like I thought . They grew back and ended up being the nicest row of Peas we've ever grown but they are a late crop , not quite ready yet. makes me want to take the weed whacker to part of a row next year to see if that can be duplicated. I'm excited for next year already , now that I can keep the deer out it's time for more fruit bearing trees/shrubs
In the center of my garden there is a raised bed dedicated to growing flowers. It draws in bees and butterflies. The cukes and zucchini are producing heavily this season.
 

Davey Crockett

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Posts
14,258
Likes
1,710
Points
638
Location
Boondocks
So many green beans we don't know what to do with. froze what we need for winter , going to pickle some but what else can a guy do with them besides eat them raw or grill them ?
 

Twitch

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 14, 2015
Posts
2,539
Likes
582
Points
358
Location
Mandan
So many green beans we don't know what to do with. froze what we need for winter , going to pickle some but what else can a guy do with them besides eat them raw or grill them ?
I like to steam them for 6 or 7 minutes. Then put them in a pat of butter until it melts
 


LBrandt

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Thread starter
Joined
Apr 3, 2016
Posts
10,987
Likes
1,750
Points
583
Location
SE ND
In the center of my garden there is a raised bed dedicated to growing flowers. It draws in bees and butterflies. The cukes and zucchini are producing heavily this season.
I also have the raised flower bed in the middle plus a ring of marigolds around the outside and random 5 gal buckets here and there with marigolds in them. Seems they attract the most bees. LB
 

Lycanthrope

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 6, 2015
Posts
6,570
Likes
1,689
Points
608
Location
Bismarck
If you want bees, consider catmint, its perennial and beez love that stuff... I recently dug up one clump and split it into 33 new plants that I have establishing themselves in containers for now
 


Davey Crockett

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Posts
14,258
Likes
1,710
Points
638
Location
Boondocks
This is worth a try if you like regular lasagna. I cut the zucchini last night with a banjo 1/8' to 1/4 '' slabs and salted with sea salt it and stirred up a few times in a colander and let it sweat overnight . she threw it to together this morning like a regular recipe calls for and I threw it in the Masterbuilt @ 275 for 4 and a half hours without smoke. Going to see how it survives a freeze and thaw , tempted to try a little smoke . Speaking from past results , don't skip the salt sweat overnight or it will be like soup.
 

Davey Crockett

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Posts
14,258
Likes
1,710
Points
638
Location
Boondocks
Looks good but that's too much sugar for my body . Have you ever made anything out of watermelon ? I have a bumper crop this year and was thinking about making some wine since It's naturally sweet and shouldn't take much sugar but I'm not sure If I could like acquire a taste for it , I haven't had a sip of wine since I was a kid and snuck a gallon of Dad's chokecherry wine on a camping trip.
 

Jiffy

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
Oct 19, 2018
Posts
2,085
Likes
1,572
Points
523
Location
West Fargo
Made some aronia liquor that is surprisingly good...
50% aronia juice + 50% sugar, mix and heat just enough to dissolve the sugar
mix sugar juice 50/50 with vodka for 20% alcohol liquor (also used some 50/50 vodka and everclear for 34% alcohol final product)

20230831_092019.jpg
You should have added some Mexican Vanilla.....
 


Recent Posts

Friends of NDA

Top Posters of the Month

  • This month: 5
  • This month: 5
  • This month: 5
  • This month: 3
  • This month: 2
  • This month: 2
  • This month: 1
  • This month: 1
  • This month: 1
  • This month: 1
Top Bottom