-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Archives
Categories
Meta
Monthly Archives: October 2024
Dreams of Crop Diversity-The Perennial Bean
The thought of creating or exploring a new crop is a good idea. It is very simple. You start with seeds. All new crops start with new seeds. Like an idea the new seeds are something that no one has … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration, Miracles of Nature
Tagged agriculture, bean consciousness, bean hybrids, Beans, beneficial-plants, crop-diversity, ecology, food, garden, gardening, hybrid plants, Lima bean, perennial bean, plant-diversity, seeds, thicket bean, vegetables
Comments Off on Dreams of Crop Diversity-The Perennial Bean
The Hazelnut Arrives
It was over forty years ago when I first peered through the tree line on the land I was about to purchase and spotted hazelnuts. It was a good sign. I had no idea what was ahead of me. Here … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration, Miracles of Nature
Tagged agriculture, Corylus americana, Corylus x hybrid, ecology, filazels, food, hazelberts, hazelnuts, nuts, seeds, tree crops
Comments Off on The Hazelnut Arrives
Flavor in the Distance
There are many types of wild fruits that people use for jam, jelly and syrup. These are harvested locally by those who are aware of a unique fruit that are not cultivated. It is made on stove tops in small … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration
Tagged berry, food, fruit, fruit growing, jams, jellies, nature, recipes, Viburnum, wild fruit
Comments Off on Flavor in the Distance
Flavor Impossible
Some of the plants I grew at my farm were the ‘lost in translation’ of the edible world. I was not sure how anyone, made use of or processed and consumed in some way their fruits or foliage. The flavors … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration
Tagged bitter foods, cultivated, ecology, edible wild, food, foraging, gardening, nature, vegetables, wild crops
Comments Off on Flavor Impossible
Alders Grow the Extra Mile
The Genus Alnus contains some amazing unsung heroes of tree crops.There are no commercial stands of alders or horticultural varieties to be found in cultivation. As far as I could tell there were no indications that any nursery produced alders … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration, Miracles of Nature
Tagged agroforestry, alders, Alnus, Alnus orientalis, environment, fast growing, lumber, nature, nitrogen fixing, Oriental alder, tree crops, trees, woody crops
Comments Off on Alders Grow the Extra Mile
Chinquapin Chestnut On the Move
In the shadow of the hardwood forests of North America lies a well kept treasure rarely cultivated. It is a small nut shrub called the chinquapin. Unlike any number of chestnut trees cultivated or wild, the chinquapin is mostly thought … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration
Tagged biodiversity, Castanea, Castanea pumila, chestnut, chinquapin, ecology, environment, hybrid chestnut, nature, wild food, wild species
Comments Off on Chinquapin Chestnut On the Move
Hog Peanut Moves to the Light
Once a seed repository is built up including varietal selections like Crispy Snack, seeds can be used for the production of the tubers. You can pelletize the seed for greater uniformity and inoculate it with appropriate nitrogen fixing bacteria. It … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration
Tagged agriculture, biological enrichment, crop-diversity, ecology, edible, food, garden, gardening, hog peanut, nitrogen fixation, plants, seeds, tuber-crop, vegetables, wild, wild plants
Comments Off on Hog Peanut Moves to the Light
The Perfect Plum
One of my early nursery experiences with another nursery owner on the west coast was with plums. He was producing an Asian species from seed like gangbusters. I started seeing them in the some of the giant retailers like Gurney … Continue reading
Posted in Diversity Found, Ecology-Biodiversity-Integration
Tagged agriculture, ecology, fruit production, garden, gardening, japanese plums, multi-story agriculture, nature, plants, plums, regeneration, seeds, tree
Comments Off on The Perfect Plum