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Category: [04-Plants]
Perennial and annual wonders that are all around us
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I’ve never known Roast to go up on this fence before! I thought he…
I’ve never known Roast to go up on this fence before! I thought he…
I’ve never known Roast to go up on this fence before! I thought he was too heavy to get up that high! The araucanas are on it all the time and occasionally the hybrids go up there, but none of the bigger ones usually. As you can see, the rain has brought the hair dyes…
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BblYF6BAdCz
the, known, roast
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It’s that time again to trim back the peppermint which has been going nuts…
It’s that time again to trim back the peppermint which has been going nuts…
It’s that time again to trim back the peppermint which has been going nuts with this warm weather and rain. #peppermint #mint #instagarden #growwhatyoueat #organicgarden #organicgardening #instagardenlovers #permaculture #growsomethinggreen #growyourown #urbanorganicgardener #urbangardenersrepublic #garden #gardening #urbangarden #citygarden #smallspacegardening #urbanfarmer #seedsnow #gardenactivist #thehappygardeninglife #vegetablegarden #mygarden #homegrown #gardeningaustralia #gardenlife #growyourown #inmygarden
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/Bbl3uvJFoFA
#peppermint, #mint, #instagarden, #growwhatyoueat, #organicgarden, #organicgardening, #instagardenlovers, #permaculture, #growsomethinggreen, #growyourown, #urbanorganicgardener, #urbangardenersrepublic, #garden, #gardening, #urbangarden, #citygarden, #smallspacegardening, #urbanfarmer, #seedsnow, #gardenactivist, #thehappygardeninglife, #vegetablegarden, #mygarden, #homegrown, #gardeningaustralia, #gardenlife, #inmygarden, peppermint, has, growyourown
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Salade radis redmeat, radis noir, kiwano, betteraves Chioggia, tomates et lentilles beluga . Légumes…
Salade radis redmeat, radis noir, kiwano, betteraves Chioggia, tomates et lentilles beluga . Légumes…
Salade radis redmeat, radis noir, kiwano, betteraves Chioggia, tomates et lentilles beluga . Légumes de la ferme les folies maraîchères. #colorfullsalad #automncolors #localvegetables
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/Bbg153hBdFd
#colorfullsalad, #automncolors, #localvegetables, radis, redmeat, noir
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Varieties have the powerful capacity to carry memories and stories. What variety will forever…
Varieties have the powerful capacity to carry memories and stories. What variety will forever…
Varieties have the powerful capacity to carry memories and stories. What variety will forever be a part of your memory and story? #saveseeds #heirlooms
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BbP8IPLhR-h
#saveseeds, #heirlooms, and, what, the
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This is what’s happening lately
This is what’s happening lately
This is what’s happening lately
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BbhB2oLA6Oa
happening, whats, this
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An old pic, but I find it inspiring! This is a bed in a…
An old pic, but I find it inspiring! This is a bed in a…
An old pic, but I find it inspiring! This is a bed in a community garden in downtown #Halifax. I love the variety of edibles and the intensive planting. Very productive! . . . . #gardentotable #veggiegarden #vegetablegarden #growyourownfood #garden #gardening #gardenlife #raisedbeds #communitygarden #urbanfarming #urbanfarm #urbangarden #homegrown #organicgardening #allotment #plants #lettuce #vegetables #throwback #novascotia…
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/Bbg5uJ1A0Dd
#Halifax, #gardentotable, #veggiegarden, #vegetablegarden, #growyourownfood, #garden, #gardening, #gardenlife, #raisedbeds, #communitygarden, #urbanfarming, #urbanfarm, #urbangarden, #homegrown, #organicgardening, #allotment, #plants, #lettuce, #vegetables, #throwback, #novascotia, old, but, find
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The 7,000 square foot farm hopes to generate 15,000 pounts of food every season…
The 7,000 square foot farm hopes to generate 15,000 pounts of food every season…
The 7,000 square foot farm hopes to generate 15,000 pounts of food every season for patients at @bostonmedicalcenter. They’re also working towards becoming the first carbon-neutral hospital in New England by 2018. ⠀ ⠀ #learngreen #livegreen #boston #urbanfarming #rooftopfarm #greenmatters
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BbhJ40Ej7sx
#learngreen, #livegreen, #boston, #urbanfarming, #rooftopfarm, #greenmatters, the, pounts, square
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Last winter was my first time growing fava beans and the only regret I…

Last winter was my first time growing fava beans and the only regret I had was not planting more, so for this #throwbackthursday let me tell you why I’m planting twice as many this year.
Take a look at this picture, you might see a plant that is months away from bearing its first edible beans, and you’d be right, but there’s more to favas than just the delicious beans.
First of all, they’re easy to grow. Just pop the seeds in the ground in fall or winter and let nature do the rest. If you’re in a dry climate you may need to water them periodically.
As they grow the plants will actually take nitrogen from the air and transfer it to their roots, making is available for your soil and future plants.
But my favorite thing about favas is that the entire plant is edible! Now I wouldn’t recommend chewing on the stock or any thick stems but the leaves, young shoots, flowers and young bean pods are all delicious raw or cooked. Last winter we couldn’t get enough fava leaf pesto.
And that my friends is why we’re planting twice as many favas this year!
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So what crop has earned itself a larger plot in your garden or farm this season? -
![Easy Crockpot Applesauce Recipe [With Canning Instructions] | Hillsborough Homesteading](https://bhf1.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/crockapplesauce.jpg)
Easy Crockpot Applesauce Recipe [With Canning Instructions] | Hillsborough Homesteading
Disclosure: Some of the links below are affiliate links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase.

This easy, two-part recipe for applesauce is one of my favorites for Fall. Apples are incredibly abundant in the Fall and can be collected at a Pick-Your-Own, a local farmer’s market, or, if you’re lucky, your own backyard tree. Our orchard is still coming along, so this year we had to get our apples from a local Farmer’s Market.

I love this recipe because it’s easy, healthy, tasty, and makes for a quick dessert that tastes naughty for you, but really isn’t! Apples are high in fiber, Vitamin C, and antioxidants. They are high in natural sugars, but the fiber in them keep your blood sugar from spiking.
In fact, I used this recipe, minus the sugar and cinnamon, to make a large batch of applesauce/homemade baby food for the little one and froze it into ice cubes.
You can make your applesauce following the same recipe in a saucepan on the stove if you’re short on time. However using the crockpot is much easier and you don’t have to worry about watching it to make sure it doesn’t burn. You’ll also make your house smell amazing! Win-win!
For free canning printables, check out my post here. No sign up required! I’ve created two quick reference sheets that list out the most common canning goods (salsas, tomatoes, fruit, etc) and the canning times for both Pints and Quarts, boiling water canning and pressure canning. Take a look and share with as many people as you’d like!
For more great Fall-time Apple recipes, check out Herbal Academy’s Harvest Time Apple Recipes.

To make this recipe, simply peel, core and roughly chop your apples. Save yourself some time and buy an apple peeler/corer. I love this one because it’s manual. You don’t need electricity to use it. If you’re off-grid or simply don’t want to “plug in”, these are a great tool.
Throw your apples and cinnamon stick into a crockpot (or saucepan) and let cook until soft and mushy. Honestly, you could stop here and pour these delicious apple chunks over vanilla ice cream and call it done!

To turn your chunks into sauce, you can use a potato masher for chunkier sauce (easier for babies to scoop up onto a spoon), or run your chunks through a food processor or blender for smoother sauce.

Stir in the lemon juice (and sugar or honey if you choose) and scoop your new applesauce into clean canning jars leaving about 1/2 inch headspace. Remove the bubbles, secure the lids and process in a boiling water bath for 20 minutes.

Voila! You have a delicious, homemade snack or dessert on hand you can feel good about giving to your family.
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Prep Time 30minutes Cook Time 4-5hours Servings pintsIngredients- 6 lbs apples
- 1 stick cinnamon or use ground cinnamon to taste
- 1 1/2-2 cups water
- 1/2 cup sugar or honey (optional)
- 2 Tbsp lemon juice (for canning)
Prep Time 30minutes Cook Time 4-5hours Servings pintsIngredients- 6 lbs apples
- 1 stick cinnamon or use ground cinnamon to taste
- 1 1/2-2 cups water
- 1/2 cup sugar or honey (optional)
- 2 Tbsp lemon juice (for canning)
InstructionsMake Your Applesauce-
Peel, core, and roughly chop your apples.
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Throw apples, cinnamon and sugar (or honey) into a saucepan or crockpot.
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For saucepan cooking, simmer until apple chunks simply fall apart. Blend and add back to saucepan for another 10-15 minutes.
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For crockpot cooking, cook on low for 8-10 hours, or high for 4-5 hours.
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If you like thin applesauce, run your apples through a food processor. For chunkier applesauce, a potato masher works just fine.
Canning-
Add your lemon juice to your applesauce.
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Sterilize your jars according to your normal practice.
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Add your applesauce to your jars, leaving 1/2 inch of headspace and removing any bubbles. (This recipe will fill roughly 4 pint jars.)
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Secure lids.
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Process in a hot water bath for 20 minutes for pints and half pints, 25 minutes for quarts.
Share this RecipeRelated
http://hillsborough-homesteading.com/recipe/crockpot-applesauce-canning/
On – 03 Oct, 2017 By Lauren Dibble
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The Fruit Gardener’s Bible: A Complete Guide to Growing Fruits and Nuts in the Home Garden
Enjoy bushels of crispy apples and baskets of juicy blueberries from your own backyard. Authors Lewis Hill and Leonard Perry provide everything you need to know to successfully grow delicious organic fruit at home, from choosing the best varieties for your area to planting, pruning, and harvesting a bountiful crop. With tips on cultivating strawberries,…;

Storey Publishing, LLCPrice:
$24.95$16.96 Free Shipping
Enjoy bushels of crispy apples and baskets of juicy blueberries from your own backyard. Authors Lewis Hill and Leonard Perry provide everything you need to know to successfully grow delicious organic fruit at home, from choosing the best varieties for your area to planting, pruning, and harvesting a bountiful crop. With tips on cultivating strawberries, raspberries, grapes, pears, peaches, and more, this essential reference guide will inspire year after year of abundantly fruitful gardening.
Full Customer Reviews:
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Look at what’s going up at Seed Savers Exchange! Our new high tunnels are…
Look at what’s going up at Seed Savers Exchange! Our new high tunnels are…
Look at what’s going up at Seed Savers Exchange! Our new high tunnels are going to be an incredible asset to our seed production and regeneration efforts. High tunnels elevate temperatures during the growing season, promoting faster plant growth and increased yields. They provide frost and freeze protection in spring and fall, extending the growing…
Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BbVIA3nnDH1
and, going, seed
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Carrots Love Tomatoes: Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful Gardening

Storey Publishing, LLCPrice: Free
Plant parsley and asparagus together and you’ll have more of each, but keep broccoli and tomato plants far apart if you want them to thrive. Utilize the natural properties of plants to nourish the soil, repel pests, and secure a greater harvest. With plenty of insightful advice and suggestions for planting schemes, Louise Riotte will inspire you to turn your garden into a naturally nurturing ecosystem.
Free
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Meals, Meal Planning and homesteading food.

Meals, Meal Planning and homesteading food.
Blog, Homesteading control, dinners, family, feeding, homestead, homesteading, kids, meal planning, meals, meat, month of meals, of 6, people, portion0
Today is a workday and I am a bookkeeper. I spend most of my time on a computer when I am not homesteading. So, for a lot of you yesterday was your Monday. For me it was a homesteading day and I cooked about 3 lbs. of sweet potatoes that I purchased from the local farmer. (I told you about in a earlier blog.) They were probably some of the best tasting sweet potatoes I have ever had! I also worked on my affiliate sites, and social media. And I have some telecommunications clients I freelance for and I worked on that as well.
The other thing I did yesterday that falls into our Homesteading in Place structure, is that I went grocery shopping. Right now, we feed six people every day. Monday – Friday the kids have breakfast and lunch at school and that relieves three of the mouths part-time. I pack my lunch for work 4 days a week, my oldest daughter works, has an internship and goes to college (She is 17 years old). She takes care of her own schedule and either packs her food or purchases something in town with her own money. My ex-husband also lives with us and he is at home full-time so he eats his meals at the house.
The breakdown for meals is as follows for my family.

Breakfast Lunch Dinner Total per week Me 7 7 7 21 Daughter 1 7 7 7 21 Son 1 2 2 7 11 Daughter 2 2 2 7 11 Son 2 2 2 7 11 Ex-Husband 7 7 7 21 If you would like to see where I got recomindations on how much per week you can click HERE
Let us look at dinner. Really, I plan those meals. Everyone eats dinner. That is seven meals per person per week.
If each person is supposed to consume 8 oz. of meat in a meal then I have to plan for and buy 84 lbs. of meat a month. That is really a lot when you look at it that way. If you are homesteading and you have cows, or you hunt and you have deer in the freezer this helps mitigate this cost. However, I do not have either at the moment. My homesteading and growing / canning garden vegetables will help us in providing nutritious meals to my family.You can go about meal planning several ways. Whether you are homesteading or not, you should plan your meals. This will save you time and energy each month and if you have kids you will not have to hear the dreaded, “What’s for dinner?” each night. It helps with cost versus price of each thing that you consume and have to buy.

The other way I cut cost is portion control. I make everyone’s plates at my home for dinner. Now I know that not all people agree with this. Some think that I am still waiting on my children and ex-husband. Honestly, this is not the case. I make the plates from the smallest eater to the largest and not the other way around. My 9-year-old will eat a lot less than his dad or 17-year-old brother.
I look at it as a math problem. If I have, eight portions of food cooked for dinner and I am feeding six people. How many can I really feed? Well, surprisingly the 9-year-old will eat about ½ a portion, my 13-year-old will eat about ¾ a portion, my 17-year-old son will eat 1 ½ portion, my 17-year-old daughter will eat 1, I will eat 1 and my ex will eat up to 2. This is if they were left to their own devices.
(.5+.75+1.5+1+1+2= 13.5)When I portion control everything, the problem becomes simpler.
(.5+.5+1+1+1+1=5)Then if anyone is still hungry, they are welcome to finish what is left. But this way I have ensured that everyone has received enough protein to fuel his or her bodies.
Remember the end goal is to save as much as you can, without sacrificing health and wellness.What kind of diet do you eat?
Well, we eat all things and try to have as balanced of a diet as possible. That being said we also lean toward a high protein low carb diet. And we are doing our best to ease into a diabetic friendly diet because both my ex and I have diabetes in our family.
We are big meat eaters, however each month we try to have a few meals without meat. The downside is that normally those meals are high in carbs. I am posting our last 30 days of meals below. If you have any questions on this meal plan please feel free to ask questions and leave your comments below.
Sunday Monday Tues Wed Thurs Friday Sat 4-Sep 5-Sep 6-Sep 7-Sep 8-Sep 9-Sep Breakfast Lunch Snack Dinner BURRITOES STOGANOFF W/ ROLLS CHICKEN /W POTATOES HAMBURGER HELPER-TURKEY CHICKEN PASTA BROCCOLI STEAK & BEAN BURRITO BOWL 10-Sep 11-Sep 12-Sep 13-Sep 14-Sep 15-Sep 16-Sep Breakfast Lunch Snack Dinner PORK CARNITAS MEAT LOAF SWAII CHILLI PORK CHOPS RANCH BURGERS & FRIES PIZZA 17-Sep 18-Sep 19-Sep 20-Sep 21-Sep 22-Sep 23-Sep Breakfast Lunch Snack Dinner SALMON BURGERS POTATO SOUP SPAGHETTI POT ROAST SAULSBURRY STEAKS FRIED CHICKEN /W MASHED POTATOES RIBS/ HAMBURGERS/ HOTDOGS 24-Sep 25-Sep 26-Sep 27-Sep 28-Sep 29-Sep 30-Sep Breakfast Lunch Snack Dinner LEFT OVER BBQ STUFFED BELL PEPERS COUNTRY FRIED STEAK CORN BEEF SLOPPY JOE LASAGNA CHICKEN POT PIE 1-Oct 2-Oct 3-Oct 4-Oct 5-Oct 6-Oct 7-Oct Breakfast Lunch Snack Dinner PARMISAN CHICKEN W/ PASTA & RED SAUCE ONE POT CHEESEBURGER CASSEROLLE PULLED PORK CREAM OF MUSHROOM CHICKEN BURRITOES HAMBURGERS & FRIES BREAKFAST The meals in Blue are cooked in the crock pot to give us a break from the kitchen.
The meal in orange is my son’s birthday and a speacial event.
I will be posting my recipies as I have time. I will also be making youtube videos on my two favorite ways to store food, canning and my vacume sealer!
And as always thank you for reading and being a part of our homestead! ?
** Here is my challenge to you. For the next 30 days wright down what you have for dinner each day and how many people eat. That way when it is time to sit down and make your meal plan you will have dinner ideas, and a jumpstart on the foods you enjoy! ?
https://www.homesteadinginplace.com/meals-meal-planning-and-homesteading-food/
On – 20 Oct, 2017 By Stephanie S.
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Harvested and krauting the last of the beetroots (grated root & chopped tops together)…

Harvested and krauting the last of the beetroots (grated root & chopped tops together) to make way for spring plantings…
.Chop it, grate it, generous sprinkle of salt, a bit of a massage and a bit of a pound (see stories), then once it’s weeping, into jars topped with a whole leaf to submerge it all. Leave it out on the bench for about a week, then taste and when suitably sour, eat with gusto or refrigerate for later. Simple and delicious probiotic goodness? #permacultureskills #fromtheearth #wildfermentation
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Our forest of garlic! . The bulbs are beginning to thicken up nicely it…

?Our forest of garlic! ?
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The bulbs are beginning to thicken up nicely now…. it won’t be long until harvest time! ?
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This variety is called Italian purple.. ? and it’s a firm favourite for growing here. ? ?
? The tricky part is to plant the garlic early enough so that it can be harvested in time to use the bed for our summer plantings.??? Looks like we’re on track this year….
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?Have a wonderful Saturday my friends! ??
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#garlic #homegrown #harvest #vegetablegarden #veggies #growyourownfood #growsomethinggreen #thehappygardeninglife #hydrovegan #urbanorganicgardener #mygarden #seedsnow #gardenactivist #greenthumb #gardeningaustralia #homesteading #gardenlove #gardentotable #urbangarden #organicgarden #permaculture #allotment #greenthumb #organicgardening #growyourown #vegetables #urbanfarming #vegetable #epicgardening -

How to grow Cauliflower, cruciferous

Cauliflower
Cauliflower is a cool-season crop and a offspring of the frequent cabbage. If you plant to effort rising cauliflower in the home garden, it require time after time cool temperatures with temperatures in the 60 s. The soil pH ought to be between 6.5 and 6.8.
It is best to create cauliflower from transplants quite than seeds. Transplant 2 to 4 weeks before the regular frost date in the spring, no earlier and not a great deal later.
Liberty the transplants 18 to 24 inches apart with 30 inches between rows. Use first course manure when transplanting.Plant fall cauliflower concerning the same time as go down cabbage. These are typically 6 to 8 weeks previous to the first fall rime and also require being later than the temperature is below 75 degrees F. If you actually want to try preliminary cauliflower from seeds, start the seeds 4 to 5 weeks before the plants are enviable. Plant the seeds in rows 3 to 6 inches separately and ¼ to ½ of an inch deep. They need 1 to 1.5 inches of water each week; with usual rainfall, this usually requires complement watering.
For most outstanding growth, side-dress the plants with a nitrogen manure. Note that the cauliflower will start out as a loose skull and it takes time for the head to form. Many variety take at least 75 to 85 days from transplant. If the cauliflower has a coarse look, it is too mature and be supposed to be tossed.Health benefits of cauliflower
1. Boost Your Brain Health
Cauliflower is a good cause of chorine, a B vitamin known for its role in brain growth. Choline intake through pregnancy “super-charged” the brain activity of animals in utero, representing that it may increase cognitive function, and get better learning and memory. It might even reduce age-related memory refuse and your brain’s susceptibility to toxin through childhood, as well as confer defense later in life.
2. Detoxification Support
Cauliflower helps your body’s aptitude to detoxify in various ways. It contain antioxidants that grasp up period 1 detoxification the length of with sulfur-containing nutrients vital for Phase 2 detox behavior. The glucosinolates in cauliflower also make active detoxification enzymes. Digestive Benefits
Cauliflower is a very important basis of food fiber for digestive health. But that’s not all. According to the World’s Healthiest Foods:“Researchers have determined that the sulforaphane made from a glucosinolates in cauliflower (glucoraphanin) can help defend the lining of your stomach. Sulforaphane provide you with this fitness benefit by prevent bacterial overgrowth of Helicobacter pylori in your stomach or too much cling by this bacterium to your stomach wall.”
Antioxidants and Phytonutrients Galore
consumption cauliflower is like charming the antioxidant and phytonutrient draw. It’s crowded with vitamin C, beta-carotene, Kaempferol, Quercetin, Rutin, cinnamon acid, and much more. Antioxidants are nature way of as long as your cells with sufficient protection alongside assault by hasty oxygen species (ROS).
As long as you have these vital micronutrients, your corpse will be able to oppose aging cause by your daily contact to pollutants, chronic stress, and more. If you don’t have an adequate provider of antioxidants to help hush up free radical. Then you can be at risk of oxidative stress, which lead to accelerated tissue and organ damage.
Cauliflower Is Only One Type of Cruciferous Veggie
If cauliflowers isn’t your favorite vegetable, don’t be anxious. You can get many of these same benefits by eating other members of the cruciferous vegetable family. Broccoli is one of them, but there are others too, including.The more vegetables you eat from this list the improved, as each offers sole and superb benefits to your health. For example, just one cup of kale contains over 10,000 IUs of vitamin A, the equal of over 200% of the daily value. Cabbage, in the meantime, is rich in vitamin K1 and B vitamins, which many are, absent in, and has been shown to help heal stomach ulcers and offers benefits to digestion. Additionally:
Pests/Diseases
• Cabbageworm: Nectar from dwarf zinnias lures ladybugs and other predators that help to protect cauliflower from cabbageworms.
• Cabbage root maggots
• Aphids
• Harlequin bugs
• Clubroot
• Black rothttp://rdspweb.com/cauliflower/
On – 30 Apr, 2017 By Ravi Dutt Sharma
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How to Grow, Harvest, and Use Ginger – 15 Acre Homestead
How to Grow, Harvest, and Use Ginger
Posted by Annie | | Gardening, Herb gardens, Home Skills, Kitchen Tutorials and Tips | |

Ginger is a plant to which the rhizome (the root) is used as a spice for cooking and as an added ingredient to homeopathic medicines. It is known to be one of the healthiest spices you can put into your body. This spicy herb is also added to many DIY cosmetics and other beauty products.
Although originating in China, most of this spiced root we buy today in the United States comes from Hawaii. It is a perennial plant but has an annual stalk. The root is the part of the plant that is harvested.
For extensive information, you can visit WebMD for a complete description of its uses, side effects and more.
Growing and Harvesting Ginger
Ginger is a perennial bulb that normally grows in zones 7 to 10, both in a pot and planted in the ground. It desires a warm, humid climate and filtered sunlight but also prefers to be crowded.
Rich, organic soil with good drainage is required as well as a ph of 5.5 to 6.5. This herb does extremely well in a hydroponic situation. Temperatures of between 77° and 83° are ideal.
The rhizome is planted in late fall throughout early winter at 2″ to 4″ deep and with the desired spacing of about 5″ between each plant. It is a slow grower but can reach 2 to 3 foot in height. Fertilizer is required on a regular basis and 5-5-5 is recommended. Because it prefers a humid climate, a drip system is the preferred watering method.

Harvesting takes place around 10 to 12 months after planting and is usually done after the leaves start to yellow and fall over. Harvesting is done by digging up the rhizome, removing roots and stems, and washing.
Basil and tomatoes make great companions but keep ginger away from onions and turnips. The only real pests are banana aphids and thrips.
Preserving and Using Ginger
Ginger can be preserved in many ways. Some simple methods are listed below.
Ginger Paste:
Add filtered water to minced garlic. Add to a food processor. Place in a baby food jar or larger depending on the quantity made and store in the fridge for up to 6 weeks.
Freezer Preservation:
Method 1: Mince small pieces of chopped ginger in food processor until a paste. Drop by teaspoon or tablespoon onto a cookie sheet with parchment paper. Set in freezer until frozen. Remove from the cookie sheet. Place in freezer bags. Remove as much air as possible. (Keeps for months)
Method 2: Wrap whole pieces of ginger in waxed paper then into freezer bags into the freezer. (keeps 3 months)
Method 3: Cut old parts off and peel. Wash and cut into small pieces. Place the pieces into a blender then cover with water. Blend the mixture until smooth. Strain with a cheesecloth or t-towel. Add the liquid to icecube trays and use for tea. Place leftover pulp from the cloth into icecube trays. Freeze well then transfer to plastic bags to use in recipes later.
Ginger Tea:

Cut ginger into small pieces. Crush to a pulp in a mortar and pestle. When it becomes a paste add 3 or 4 tablespoons of pulp into a homemade tea bag. Add the tea bag to a mug and fill with hot water then allow to steep for 2 minutes. Remove tea bag and add 1 teaspoon of honey or more to taste.

Ginger is easy to grow, easy to harvest and easy to preserve. There are many recipes using ginger that can be found on the internet. Start growing it on your homestead and be rewarded with the health benefits and great taste. For a well-written and informative post on this herb and its benefits please visit The Wellness Mama.
Do you grow ginger on your homestead? Do you have recipes you use when cooking for your family that include fresh ginger? Please share them in the comments below!
If you are just getting started with herb growing on your homestead you may like Getting Started with Herbs or Preserving Herbs on the Homestead.
http://15acrehomestead.com/grow-harvest-use-ginger/
On – 18 Oct, 2017 By Annie
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The Backyard Homestead: Produce all the food you need on just a quarter acre!

Storey Publishing, LLCPrice:
$18.95$13.45 Free ShippingThis comprehensive guide to homesteading provides all the information you need to grow and preserve a sustainable harvest of grains and vegetables; raise animals for meat, eggs, and dairy; and keep honey bees for your sweeter days. With easy-to-follow instructions on canning, drying, and pickling, you’ll enjoy your backyard bounty all winter long.Storey Publishing



$18.95$13.45







