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Old February 4, 2013   #31
Craigaria
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They canned them and I was picking them everyday. I gave some away at church too. We couldn't keep up, it was unbelievable how many tomatoes there was. They having a hard time giving them away so eventually they gave up and they started rotting on the vine. I'd go every few days and pick all the good ones, but I couldn't eat them fast enough either.

I think we are going to do more cucumbers this year. We started making pickles and they are tasty. I'm hoping to get my tomato fix with my plants
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Old February 4, 2013   #32
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They canned them and I was picking them everyday. I gave some away at church too. We couldn't keep up, it was unbelievable how many tomatoes there was. They having a hard time giving them away so eventually they gave up and they started rotting on the vine. I'd go every few days and pick all the good ones, but I couldn't eat them fast enough either.

I think we are going to do more cucumbers this year. We started making pickles and they are tasty. I'm hoping to get my tomato fix with my plants

Next step is chickens to eat all the culls!
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Old February 4, 2013   #33
Craigaria
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I don't know...

Do they make heirloom cucumbers
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Old February 4, 2013   #34
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There are heirloom cucumbers.
For an easy to grow " cucumber" that grows in heat but isn't really a cucumber, I love Armenian cucumbers. They never get bitter.
I found they even make a decent " sour kosher" lacto-fermented pickle this year. They make a wonderful rice wine, onion, tomato salad and a great relish.
I've heard you can even make "banana" bread with them! I had some 10+ pounders but I ended up giving them to the chickens.
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Old February 5, 2013   #35
Craigaria
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There are heirloom cucumbers.
Well then, that settles it...

I guess I am going to have to buy my wife some flowers
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Old February 5, 2013   #36
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Next step is chickens to eat all the culls!
There's heirloom chickens too.
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Old February 6, 2013   #37
Craigaria
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Well here is what happened with my bean test.

I placed my two red solo cups on the kitchen window seal. I had a bean in each to test the manure I'm using. My 2.5 year old son came home yesterday and dumped them out in the kitchen and playroom. So still no results there, and my wife got the honor of cleaning up manure

I started over with the bean test only this time I hid them in the bathroom window.

How long should it take for them to sprout. I used Lima beans.
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Old February 6, 2013   #38
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First thing that came up with a google search said 6-18 days at a 1" depth. Limas are heat lovers and don't like soil <65 degrees F.
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Old February 6, 2013   #39
Craigaria
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Thanks, I guess I could have searched that myself...

Good news is I'm keeping them inside so the temp shouldn't be an issue
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Old February 6, 2013   #40
Cole_Robbie
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At inside temps, it should be much closer to six days than eighteen.
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Old February 6, 2013   #41
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Craigaria View Post
Well here is what happened with my bean test.

I placed my two red solo cups on the kitchen window seal. I had a bean in each to test the manure I'm using. My 2.5 year old son came home yesterday and dumped them out in the kitchen and playroom. So still no results there, and my wife got the honor of cleaning up manure

I started over with the bean test only this time I hid them in the bathroom window.

How long should it take for them to sprout. I used Lima beans.
LOL Teach the kid to garden! He obviously has the knack! You picked probably the slowest sprouting of the beans! I have this vision of the angry wife and chaos reigning at your house! The thoughts running through my head of the potential catastrophe about to happen...... It's almost like a B movie comedy! Potentially with an R rating!

Don't worry though, 30 years from now you'll have a good chuckle about it over a big juicy tomato sandwich
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Old February 6, 2013   #42
Craigaria
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Luckily I wasn't at home when all that went down...
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Old February 15, 2013   #43
Craigaria
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Ok, I planted two Lima beans. Both sprouted but one died after it sprouted. It looked like it sprouted downward and the didn't emerge.

Good news is the other one looks good.

So does this mean my soil is ok?
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Old February 15, 2013   #44
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Ok, I planted two Lima beans. Both sprouted but one died after it sprouted. It looked like it sprouted downward and the didn't emerge.

Good news is the other one looks good.

So does this mean my soil is ok?
Should be fine. If it had herbicide, it would like effect both equally.
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Old February 18, 2013   #45
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A method for a scientific sort of test for herbicide contaminated
manure or compost:
http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/aminopyralid/bioassay.html
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