A little Garden photo update

This is a photo heavy post.. there is so much to do yet but we are working on things on a daily base..

Week three in the horse trough salad green garden. lots of picking to be done for greens this week.  There is lots of salad to be had to go with my wilder forage pickings.

The wild strawberries are going in full bloom already, where the garden strawberries are much later in their starts.

Forgot a squash in the garden and it went to seed on the same spot.. never had that happen so clearly before even in compost pile it tends to get moved more then this did 🙂

I will need to pull these up and move a number of them to grow them out, the sad thing is that they were not pure crossed or maybe they are.. no way to know.. so its a guessing game on what they will produce, but I must find out after they worked so hard to sprout.

so many fruiting bushes getting ready to bud out but just not there yet!

Posted in Garden, Life moves on daily | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

31 Day Self Reliance Challange Week Two Overview

 

Week Two Overview

Well, its been a very busy week on the farm, its spring.. is there any other kind 🙂 The weather has been outstanding in the sense of warm, sunny with a light breeze.. however we need rain! No rain this week and the land, pastures and gardens are drying out in this heat. By I mean july heat..

Things that we got done over the past week.

  • Butchered out a grow out pen of six meat rabbits
  • Worked in the main garden, planted three more beds in the main garden. Watered daily in the main garden to keep the soil moist enough for the seed starting.
  • Put up two more gutters on the brown garden shed to do rain collection off its metal roof. Repaired for rain collection for our big Metal Croft roof.  At the end of this, we have the ability to collect 550 gallons of water at one time..  This is done with 8 55 gallon rain barrels, plus one 100 gallon stock tank. We will continue to work on this, we want to get to the point of being able to collect and store for use a thousand gallons at a time.
  • Added in a new type of plum tree and three Saskatoon bushes, to the food forest area this week. These were my mother’s day presents.
  • Made Sour Dough Nettle Bread
  • Continued to work on yard clean up (its a big job)
  • Cooked up a turkey from the freezer and made a batch of Turkey soup to pressure can up for hubbies use to take to work
  • Decluttered in the house, packed up and took five box’s worth of stuff to the second hand shop. Also picked up a new purse from the said second hand shop.

This weeks round up of some of my favorite posts from our fellow bloggers

mariazanninihome.com/starting-seeds-on-the-cheap/

I loved this post, it a great list of all the different things you can use to start seeds in.. its very creative and I have to admit over the years I have done so in many of these.. At the moment however I was able to gets hundreds and hundreds of seed starting packs due to a greenhouse friend of mine that closed down. I expect that I have enough for at least ten or more years storage at this point 🙂

https://practicalselfreliance.com/burdock-tincture/

This is an outstandingly detailed post on how to harvest, prep and make burdock root tincture and burdock vinegar.  I loved her Ramp posts as well.. how to make Ramp Pesto, Pickled Ramps and such.. However I choose the Burdock post because there are hundreds of ramp posts all over the net right now as its that time of year. however I love my burdock! its one of my favorites in spring and I rarely see other bloggers posting about this amazing plant!

Farmgal’s post on growing burdock 🙂

I enjoyed reading all the blogger post goals for the challenge and I look forward to sharing different bloggers posts that I liked reading over the coming weeks 🙂

We would love to have you join the challenge and share your own steps to self sufficiency . Follow us and share your self reliance methods, tips, goals, and dreams! Be sure to visit the other bloggers and read about their self reliance journey! You can follow along each members blog or other social mediums be it Facebook, twitter or more.

If you would like to join in this challenge, please go here to fill out the form on her site

Please check out this outstanding bloggers that are joining in the challenge. More might join as we go along.

Lisa Lynn – The Self Sufficient HomeAcre

Maria – Maria Zannini

Frank – My Green Terra

Shawnalee – Homegrown Self Reliance

Ashley – Practical Self Reliance 

Candy- Candy’s Farm House Party

Robin- A life in the wild

Kathi – Oak Hill Homestead

Nancy- Nancy on the Homefront

AnnMarie- 15 Acre Homestead

And myself.. Just another day on the farm 🙂

I will be writing new content for this challenge. However I am also going to bring out of off my most popular homesteading and related posts over the blogs seven plus years history. We are asked to do a one week round up and sharing of other blogs favorite posts, I am looking forward to getting to know these new bloggers. We never stop learning 🙂

 

Posted in 31 Day Self Reliance Challange | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Sour Dough Nettle Bread

This is such a free form bread to me.. I had to write things down to make sure I could present this recipe in a format that other would get good results. I am assuming you know how to make bread, that you know how to look for good yeast action in a starter and that you know how to kneed your bread.

If you have any questions on the above, ask away?  On with the show..

Take your Sour Dough Starter and split it.

Sour Dough Nettle Breed Recipe

  • 1 1/2 cups Starter
  • 1 1/2 cups of warm water
  • 2 cups of flour
  • 2 cups of Dried Nettle Flakes. (make sure you run this though a sieve so that you do not get any little stem bits.. just crumbled dried leaf) *
  • Grated Rind of one large orange or two small
  • 2 TBSP of sugar
  • 1 tsp of salt
  • 2 TBSP of melted butter or lard or olive oil.. your choice

 

Mix all the above into a wet dough and let it sit in a nice warm kitchen for about 20 to 40 min till you start to see some yeast bubbles starting to break the surface.. it could take longer depending on how active your sour dough starter is.

Then once you know its active and growing.. you can work 4 to 6 cups of flour into it till you have a nice dough that is soft, workable but not sticky. Put into a greased bowl and let rise till double.  Then split into two loaves and put into greased tins or sheets, allow to rise till approx. double again.. Bake at 350 till golden brown and hollow on tap on bottom

If you want a firmer crust, leave as is, if you want a softer, rub a touch of butter over the top while hot out of the oven. Allow to cool and enjoy

What a great taste to this bread. Everyone who has tried it enjoy\s it but can never figure out what the extra flavour is.. it is of course the nettle 🙂  What a great way to add nettle to your diet.. and it is going to add a massive protein boost to your bread!

 

Posted in 31 Day Self Reliance Challange, Baking, Bread | Tagged , , , , | 7 Comments

Canadian Emergancy Preparedness Week

It’s very strange to me that with so many storms, floods, fires and more that has been happening and is happening right now across Canada that I am hearing nothing about the fact that its our Official Canadian emergency Preparedness Week.

The only thing that has made the news here is that our new to cell phone system that is alert those in need in a small area has failed.

Operators of Canada’s new emergency alert system say they are learning from failed tests earlier this week in Ontario and Quebec, although reports of countrywide tests on Wednesday had mixed results.

Qoute from CBC

The official line is still to be prepared for 72 hours for your family and I am not knocking it. Ok, I am knocking it.. However it would be better if everyone had a min of gear, food/water an such prepared for every house hold.

The truth is that you only need to look across Canada to understand that 3 days is not cutting it..  In the last wind storm, thousands still without out power a week plus and more.

Flooding in the east.. two weeks in and they are just starting to see the waters start to go down.. I listened to a women talking about the fact they were living on the main floor and that the water in the basement was rising.. it finally stopped a mear 2 inches from the main floor.  They said, we are fine, we have our own boat to get out if we need it..

Fire is already a major issue this year.. so many parts of Canada are tinder dry and locally, we have had at least three fires in the past week that got started and ran in grass fires. The counties and city next to mine have full fire bans in place. Out west.. even worse already

Thousands of British Columbians have been forced from their homes by what some officials are calling a once-in-200-years flood.
Swollen rivers in B.C.’s Interior have spilled their banks, leaving valleys dotted with small lakes and changing what is normally the province’s prime ranch country into otherworldly, mirrored paddy fields.

In some places, roads have been washed out and the ground under electricity poles has been so eroded that power lines have come down.

The flooding in B.C. is crazy at this time..

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-flooding-evacuation-1.4656616

The strange thing is that it has somehow already so fast become the new norm.. Even a few years ago.. if we had these kinds of storms. It would have been all over the news.. now.. now these kinds of events are happening so much that they are footnote.

I am sure they on the news more in their own local area and of course they are truly life altering events for those living though them..  In some case’s there will be no going back, in others it will be years of work to get there.

Hubby asked me something last week.. Are we planning for a wet year, a drought year, or a normal year.. I just looked at him and said.. all of the above..  It was a true answer, I am planting, planning and working with the goals in mind that any and all of the above will be coming.  With the new weather patterns and the more extreme storms and weather events, when it comes to farming and gardening its a guessing game at the moment. Even more so then typically.

For more information, Do check out this older post of mine.

https://livingmydreamlifeonthefarm.com/2012/05/06/did-you-know-that-this-week-is-emergency-preparedness-week-in-canada/

And for those with farm’s and live stock, I took a course on this very subject a number of years ago on how to plan for your farm and critters.

https://livingmydreamlifeonthefarm.com/2016/03/15/sundays-course-disaster-planning/

Posted in Life moves on daily | Tagged | 2 Comments

De-clutter, time to pull it together!

I feel like my farm and house have been a crisis mode for over a year now.. I have so many totes of things packed away that I can’t find half the stuff when I want it.. and some of the time when I do find it.. its been water, bug or mice damaged.. AHHHHHHHHHHHH

Between packing things away for reno’s, to mom moving in and at least for now, moving back to alberta, to winter Snow Storms, Winter Wind storms, Winter Ice storms to the last massive Spring Ice storm to the kickin 124 km at its highest gusting Spring Wind storm.. to power outages and flooded cellar.

I have used more of my storm preps in the past six months then I have in the past 14 years!  The biggest issue has been tracking down more them my basic’s. It was fine, we had everything we needed in terms of the basics.. Water Storage, Heating, Cooking, Lots of canned food, warm clothes, bedding and the list goes on.

But Every single time, more time then I want to even admit, I went.. I have this.. and this and this for this storm, or this event and where is it.. O we dug though totes and found gear, don’t get me wrong.. I figured out in a freezing rain storm, we can change our wet gear four times over while drying out the others..

HOWEVER.. I still have some gear that is just missing in LALA land.. what tote or what storage area its in is anyone’s guess. This is not ok! This is really! not ok!

Every single day since the last storm, I have given over an hour to working this issue.. clearing, checking, sorting.. removing, repairing, cleaning at least one spot, tote, shelf etc.

I have always lived in a home that most people would never be able to find 80 percent of the things they are looking for without asking me (caz my logic is out there) but normally, you ask me and I can get you to the item in question within a few feet or a layer up or down.

I want my storage, prep work and kits mojo back!

Nope, let me say that in a different way!

I am taking my storage, prep work, Pantry and Prepping kits back!

Have a good day..

Ps, so far this month, I have purged 93 items, some garbage, most will go to the second hand shop for another chance at finding a home. I am leaning down to create room for what is coming.

 

Posted in Life moves on daily | 11 Comments

5 Things you are looking for in a Broody Hen

 

Yesterday May 9th 2018 our first broody hen hatched out a lovely clutch of healthy looking little fluffy butts. This is a proven broody hen and she made both my hubby and I laugh so hard as she lead the chicks from the main chicken pen right into the same little pen that she raised her chicks in last fall.  Then gave us the look that said.. Set it up please LOL

At the moment, there are eight more fowl hens sitting on clutches in different area’s on the farm, and ideally in the next one to three weeks we will have lots of baby fowl naturally produced on the farm.

This is a huge saving on costs. Most folks order locally, they use Frey’s Hatchery.. this year Day old mix dual purpose layers are running 3.70 per chick, locally hatched barnyard mix run between 5 and 10. Turkey pullets are 7.90 from the hatchery for heritage breed and are running 15 as day olds locally when you can find them. Ducklings are 5 each from the hatchery and 5 to 10 locally.  On the hatchery costs you need to also add in gas for a hours driving (30 min each way) plus shipping fee’s and add on 13 percent tax on top of all the rest.. so 13 dollars for 100 you spend.

So far this hen has hatched me over 75 direct dollars worth of chicks in 2017-2018 which would add up to two shipping costs, two gas trips and two tax costs.. it would be fair to say that she has hatched and raised me at least 140 dollars worth of chicks.  The hens are my new layers this year and the roosters were butchered out.

My broody lady’s hatching this year between the chickens, turkey, goose, and duck hens should give me at least 500 or more in day olds..

Some of these could be sold locally to bring some extra cash into the farm. Some of these will grow up to fill the freezer and others will grow up to be the next generation of layers or breeders themselves for the farm.

It also saves on energy costs.. no heat lamps are required, no incubator using power. (granted I do like to use my incubator when I need bigger numbers of chicks being hatched)

I have also decided to copy into this post my overview and advice I had written on Broody hens in 2012..  Do you use Broody hens on your homestead?

So the first thing to know is that I am unaware of any way to make a hen go broody, I mean you can set up the extra for broody hens but if they don’t want to sit, they are not going to..

The second thing to know is that I don’t believe that broodyness has been breed out of most breeds, I just don’t think that chicken owners give the girls the time-space-age they need to figure it out, by this I mean that typically my best broody hens are between the ages of 3 to 5, and most folks owners that read the books will have already put those girls into the stew pot.

If you know that a girl is going broody and starting to sit, it might be a good idea to give a good hard look at their protein levels, if they are out on pasture or getting to forage in the yard, then they will do just fine but if they are confined, then you might want to increase that protein level if you want good to excellent hatch rates.

Now having said that, if you ask around you can find breeders in your area that will have kept broodyness in their birds, most folks will tell you to get a banty and I will get to that but for now, lets stay with layers and dual purpose birds, in my own local area the very first spring on the farm, I got Bard Rocks from a boody line, and then I went to the bird sale and picked up a set of brown leghorns from a local breeder, turns out to be one of the best choices I could have done, while they do lay smaller white eggs, and give a lighter body to the offspring (but not as bad as banties half breeds would) they have proven themselves to some of the best mothers on the farm, giving me upwards of two clutches in a summer with between 8 to 14 chicks typically.

So what am I looking for in a broody girl..

a) A smart girl that will take advantage of the quieter laying box’s, if a hen try’s to get broody on a popular active laying box, the odds are very good that when she comes off to eat/drink/bathroom, other hens will come in and mess with the nest/clutch. I have never seen a girl yet successfully sit a nest in the most open popular nesting sites.

B) Protective yes, but needs to be calm and steady bird, I repect a hen that will fluff up and give me the eye, and even a couple good strong peeks, as long as she will hunker down and set her eggs, she gets 5 stars on this, however, I need a calm steady broody girl that will let me set eggs under her (this allows you to take eggs from other birds you know laid them and make sure you get a selection of genes in that clutch), it allows you to count eggs, candle eggs and remove bad ones. Now I don’t mess with my sitting hens much or often, but a couple times in the process, I need to do so, and I want to do it while! the momma bird is there, she might peek me but if she stays during the process on the rest of the clutch, she will be happier then if she goes to eat, and you move everything around and then let her back in.

c) She needs to keep good body condition, by this I mean she needs to be willing to get off, eat, drink and do her bathroom breaks, but at the same time, she needs to be set enough that she won’t be temped to head out into the yard, I have hens sit so hard that they loss body condition, this is bad because that hen will take a good long while to get back up to condition and start laying again, where a hen that sits very well but does get off to eat and drink faithfully, will keep her condition and get back to laying within a much! shorter time frame.

d)She in fact needs to sit, lots of the time I hear, they started and then stopped and then started an stopped, or my hen goes broody all summer long.. wrong, your hen is not broody, she’s a faker, and fakers need to end up in the pot or have their eggs taken daily, don’t waste your time on a girl that won’t sit for more then a week or ten days at a time, she is wasting her time and your time.. Even in my own flock that I have been breeding broodyness into for the past 8 years, depending on breed, I can have upwards of 50% false starts from girls that won’t stay on their eggs for the full time required. Having said that once a hen sits till she hatches, I find she will almost always do it again and again..

e) She needs to stay on the eggs for that 12 to 48 hours that it will take for all of them to hatch out, nothing worse then having 8 or 10 good eggs with chicks in them and having a mother only wait for the first two or three and leave the rest to die from lack of warmth as she leaves with the only the first hatched, when you have a hen that cares, she will sit on those eggs till she can’t hear anyone anymore.

f) She should ideally be willing to take extra chicks, most hens will accept extra chicks as long as there is room, this is awesome for a number of reason’s, if you have a proven girl that you can count on, you can get new chicks in for bloodlines from that hatchery, knowing that you will not need a heat lamp, that your girl will take those extra five new females and raise them as her own, or you can move over a second hens chicks to a different mother, the chicks are still momma raises but the hen that lost her chicks will start laying much! faster then she will if she has chicks underfoot.

G)She needs to be a good momma, and just because they can sit does not mean that this is the case, she should be showing the chicks what to do in terms of food and water but she should also be very protective of them from all the other birds, along with other critters and a really good momma teaches them the babies to be weather wise as well. If you use a whistle to call your birds like we do, she will quickly teach the young ones to come to get their treats, and they will learn that you are a good thing in their world, instead of a scary thing, this will help teach the chicks to trust you and will help you raise up the next gen of steady as she goes hens.

Last but by no means least the hen that sits should be one of the best examples of what You want to see in the next gen, and by this I am not just talking about more eggs or more meat like the books are talking about, I mean, do you live in a very cold climate, then breeding to reduce comb size is a valuable trait to consider as it reduces winter heat loss, do you want pasture birds, then breeding in smarts is a good thing, do you have lots of preditors in your area, then breeding for a body type that can still fly either a good distance or up into tree’s is worth its weight in gold, good conformation is a given but I will say it anyway, you want to breed for not just a solid body but for the best legs and feet you can.

So do you look for anything else in your broody hens? Want Chick Advice –Chick 101

Posted in 31 Day Self Reliance Challange, Critters | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Wood Ash Use in the Garden

As my regular readers know we have had a bad ice storm and then a very strong wind storm, I have so many small, med and even huge limbs or tree’s down between the two storm.  I have been doing a fair amount of burning but its been a mix of all kinds of yard -garden stuff.  I cleaned out the burn pit (which is a hot water tank cut in half, waste not, want not 🙂 and I did burning for two days of hard and soft wood for very clean ash and small charcoal bits for garden use.

Wood ashes contain potassium, some phosphorus and magnesium. Nutritional value varies according to the species of wood, according to Dr. Gary F. Griffin, an agronomist with the University of Connecticut Extension Service (6/6/81).

For example, ashes from such hardwoods as maple, elm, oak and beech contain a third more calcium plus more potash than the ashes from softwoods.

Phosphorus content usually ranges between 0.8 and 3 per cent, potassium from 2.8 to 8.6 per cent, calcium from 14 to 28 per cent, magnesium from 0.8 to 2.8 per cent and sulfur from 0.3 to 0.5 per cent.  Poor man’s lime to a point but its frugal. I can’t make lime on the farm the same way I can make a very clean wood ash

Due to the lightweight of dry ashes and their total neutralizing power, it would take a considerable amount of ash to make the soil too alkaline for good crop production.  I have always been told 1/4th inch to 1/2 inch of ash in regards to thickness for spreading.. think of it as a light dusting.

The ash must have been kept dry before use otherwise the water or rain will have leached a lot from it. I wanted this ash to sweeten my tomato growing areas for this year.

The addition of ash did confer some benefits—those plants were larger and grew fruit with significantly higher magnesium and potassium content.

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/news-blog/p-is-for-plants-human-urine-plus-as-2009-09-04/

I did a light spreading of my ash and then worked it in well into the soil itself.. There will be close to a two week rest between applying, tilling in and turning the cover crop under before the tomato’s and peppers will be planted out.

Do you use wood ash in your garden?

Readers Comments- I wanted to share this advice that came in on the comment section.

I do on occasion toss it in my garden beds – but the main use on my farm is as an anti-slip on ice. When we get that freeze/melt/freeze thing going – the horses and the cows tend to be very nervous – they know they have poor footing in some areas. I just spread it on their regular paths and feeding areas. A friend had an issue last year – her cows wouldn’t come in from the field – in their heads they were trapped surrounded by ice – and it was all white. I told her to make them a ‘road’ using ashes. Not only were they happy not to slip on it, they could ‘see’ the road. Worked well.

Check out her blog 🙂 Amazing Writer..

https://bjerkesbonelesschickenranch.wordpress.com/

Posted in Garden, homestead | Tagged , , , , , | 10 Comments

Tree Hay an Tree Fodder

Sometimes you read or see something odd and it just clicks.. Tree hay for me clicked.. I mean I had been pruning out tree branches I didn’t want, I had been cutting an feeding little tree’s for years to the sheep and goat flock. So when I watched a video that Tree Hay was used in Europe for many years with pollard trees.. it made so much sense and then when I read more, dug deeper and joined a tree hay group. I saw how it was used in other counties in different ways both as fresh and as dried.

When I first watched a video on pollard tree’s and taking up to 50 percent of the branches to dry them for winter use.. I just went WOW..  This can add so much more feed on my smaller property.. Its fodder growing both the food forest and more important to me.. in the pasture.

You see I have a good amount of tree’s in the pasture that can be big pollard tree’s, they are big enough that they have straight trunks as the goats and sheep took off all the limbs below their eating range.. I can top out the tree’s and now I have both shade for the livestock, a tree belt and a productive way to use the tree greens themselves.

I plan to use the pasture cut branches as they do in the drier climates, cutting them for fresh fodder in later july and into early aug. I plan to use the pollards in the food forest for making the to dry tree hay..  They can be cut much smaller and lower to the ground as they will not have the livestock pressure on them, plus I do not need them to act in any way as a shade tree..

They are not really in full leaf yet but that is not stopping the flocks from being delighted with what they are getting, they only thing they leave behind is the non-green wood.

Ideally, you are doing your main cuts while the tree is dormant.. you want the tree to split into two or three strong ways.. each one of those will then produce lots of branches off each one of these off-shoots.

This is the wild mess that just happened from the last time. I got the splits but I also have growth all over the place..

Ok, I am hoping these photos still show what I am trying to.. the first one is before I trimmed it, the second is what I want for my summer growth. I will see if I can keep taking photos of a couple of the same tree’s over the season to show you how its going.

I got three five tree’s done this morning.. I will be doing three to five each day for a few weeks I am sure to get them all done. It will be a big job but its going to be so worth it!

I have a few willow tree’s that are being transplanted into the food forest that are only being put in to be grown into very heavily pruned fodder producing tree’s.. they are considered one of the best..

I have a lot of Norway maples on the farm.. they are have been used in the more northern climates for many years and they will have to do 🙂

 

Posted in Food Forest | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Striving for Victory – Dig for Victory

I just adore the year long challenge that my fellow Canadian blogger has taken on, and I have been waiting for the announcement of the victory garden.. I have a little copy of the official victory garden and how, what to grow and I am very interested in learning more.. I will be joining them in the garden part. I have been reducing energy costs and I already shop second hand most of the time. I do not want it to take away from the may challenge. so I will not be talking about it more then once a week max

craftytadpole's avatarhip roof barn

My apologizes for taking so long to post May’s Striving for Victory Challenge.  In my defense, the sun was shining and it was time to get busy in the garden.

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Posted in Life moves on daily | 2 Comments

Top Ten Reason’s to Grow Radish in your Garden!

radish greensFarmgal’s Tip of the Day.. When your hubby brings you in fresh garden Radish’s and they are so hot, I mean WOW heat hot.. to eat fresh.. what to do.. the answer is easy, cook them.. you can toss them with some good olive oil and sea salt and roast them, or you can slice them up and stir-fry them with other veggies. you can grate them into soups, stews or salads to make the heat meld with everything.

 

Today we are going to talk about radish..  O yes, it seems so lowly.. but its not.. its a plant that just keeps on giving and we are in major expanding mode on it to boot..  I think it will be easier to break it down into parts..

1) One of the earliest things to be planted in the gardens, right along side the first spring peas but will be certain to get a harvest sooner.. Planted though out the whole growing season, they will do well, can be used as a marker system for slow to sprout seeds, by the time the slower are up an needing the space, the radish are out.

2) Do not forget that there are short growing radishes (what we are use to in the store but that there are many long season radish that are more like a carrot or turnip in shape and that there is even winter keeping radish.. yes you read that right.. big, long slow growing keep radishs that can be held over in the root cellar for winter use

3) Greens, o boy the greens.. yummy tender greens for salads, bigger and spicy greens for mixing in anything you want, veggies, meat with greens, soups, or stews..  Or how about a yummy radish green mayo for a burger or Radish Green Pesto for a pasta dish.. So Good!

4) The seeds, If you have never collected seeds or if you are still paying though the nose for winter Sprouting seeds, you need to give Radish a try.. they grow out a nice clear pod that is easy to find, filled with lots and lots of tiny black seeds, those seeds will give you fab sprouts or micro greens at a tiny fraction of the price at the store sprouting prices.

5) the pods, fresh baby pods can be added to stirfries, or pickled, Pickled Radish pods are delightful indeed.  I must do a post on just that with a recipe or two on how to use them..

6) Trap crops.. Radish even if you are buying the seed are cheap to buy, active and easy to grow and they make excellent trap crops in the garden.. O yes, please think of your cabbage, carrots and other things that the bugs tend to love and throw some  radish around them as a trap crop. Those radish that were trap cropped, where also allowed to go to flower and then seed.. acting as a triple threat and reward, only in one place did I pull the plants, burn them, they were covered in eggs and replant it right back out in radish..

7) Green cover crops, Radish is a excellent green cover crop, basic wide scatter on a cleaned bed now in april, let it grow about two or three inches high keeping the weeds down, chop and turn under and replant the bed in a warm weather crop.

8) Do not limit yourself to eating radish fresh, it is excellent roasted, its lovely in soups and stews and it cans up into a delightful crisp winter treat as a side dish..

9) Fodder, Radish greens and are excellent for pretty much any critter you want to feed them to.. be it your chickens, rabbits, pigs or sheep, even my horses get in on the action, its adorable watching them eating up that radish greens and then the look as they get to the radish itself, but they never turn it down.. even the super hot ones are eaten with gusto

10) They are FAST, I mean really, what other plant do you know that can go from seed to table in 30 days and in ideal conditions.. 28 days..  Rock on Radish.. Rock on!

Now, What do you say. I say, run to the store and pick up five or six more packages of basic radish for green crops, for seed use or for trapping rows in your garden, but also hit the Asian area of the seeds and be brave, pick up a winter radish as well! Give it a try, they can very different flavours, some are more mild, some are so funky in color.. how about a lovely green and white radish, or a white skin with a pink middle or a lovely purple radish in color or pure white..

Posted in 31 Day Self Reliance Challange, Life moves on daily | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments