Wednesday 27 October 2021

Eating Kale Warnings:

 If you are taking blood thinning medications, kale might not be the best idea for you because kale can promote blood clotting. 


Also the leaf contains oxalates which in lab tests have been associated with kidney stones and some gallstones so check with your medical doctor before you consume tons of kale.


If you eat too much kale in one sitting kale can be hard on your digestive system, causeing bloating, gas, tummy aches and cramping raw.


 However,in that respect, you can get away with eating more kale in one sitting if you lightly steam it.


I eat about 50 gram of raw kale a day, which seems to suit me. 


Monday 25 October 2021

Raw or Steamed Kale

 There is a lot confusing nutritional information out there that people throw their hands up in the air and give up.


The confusing is about how to eat your kale, steamed or raw.


The truth of the matter is that kale is incredibly nutritious raw or steamed.I have done a lot of research on this and the debate seems to be split 50/50. 


There seems to be a lot of case studies that show that

raw kale is more beneficial than cooked and cholesterol studies show that steamed kale is more beneficial than raw. It just depends on the study and what they set out to prove.


So, don’t give up or throw in the towel, on eating kale. If you are eating kale raw or cooked, 5 gold stars.

Sunday 24 October 2021

Do not spoil your dinner

 Remember, fresh veg, dug up from the garden and the cooked, take less time than veg bought from a shop.

So, do not spoil your dinner!

Saturday 23 October 2021

Control Bugs

 You may wonder how a plant can survive, for almost every one has some bug or another that wants to destroy it.


The bugs are biters, borers, suckers and cutters. Or some that just eat the whole thing.


There are wholesale ways of controlling most of these, however, these methods are used only by big growers on a field scale. As we know, some of these methods are not healthy for us as consumer and are best left alone.


Most growers of home veg only have a dozen or so of a limited vanity of crops and the job should be easier.


All insects may be divided into two types:biters and suckers.    The way to get rid of the pests that bite and chew is, to  make the crop unpalatable to them but the fellows that suck the juices and pay no attention whatever to any contamination  on the outside surface face of a plant have to be met and slain in open battle. 

What I do is make a garlic tea and spray it often on the crop this seems to work quite well with the pest that bite and chew, as for the suckers, I make life uncomfortable for them by sucking them off with a hoover or washing them off with a hose.

Bigger pest, like birds and rats, I trap and scare away. 


Monday 18 October 2021

CONTACT INSECTICIDES FOR SUCKING INSECTS

 

CONTACT INSECTICIDES FOR SUCKING INSECTS

Soap Solution

2 oz. laundry soap to 1 gal. of water 

Nicotine Solution

½ oz. 40% nicotine}
and}to 3 gal. of water
1 oz. soap}

The soap is added to this solution to assist in spreading the mixture and to make it come in close contact with the insects.

Sunday 17 October 2021

How to get rid of white fly on your Kale:

 How to get rid of white fly on your Kale:


Short answer : You never will


However, you can reduce them, rather then have clouds of them every time you go near your crop, try a few of these ideas:


Spray them with a strong jet of water from a hose. Not very good idea on allotments where there is no running water, but very good with a water supply.


Spray with a natural liquid soap mixed with water. This does work, however, you must do it every four or five days to stop another tribe of them settled in.


Hoover them up, however, once again this is not a one off event. Repeat every few days.


Blow them off with a hair dryer on cool.


Get a bucket of Garlic tea and a small hand brush and wipe down the underside of the kale leaves. You make the garlic tea by boiling four cloves of garlic in one litre of water. Do this for ten minutes and mix with another litre of plain water. Once again, repeat every few days. 



It should be noted that the pest does not really harm your kale, just makes it very unpleasant to crop. 


White fly will need to reach a very high level of population to cause any damage to your crop. If this should happen, you will find leaves going yellow because the fly suck the sap out of the plant.


So the whole point of the above ideas is not to let the white fly numbers increase to the “ damage level “

What you can do to clean the leaf before you eat  is to put the kale in water and give it a good wash to flush them away.


Heat or cold does not seem to bother them.


As far as I am aware white fly will not harm you if you eat them 


Sunday 10 October 2021

How To Cure Your Pumpkins:

 How To Cure Your Pumpkins:


Cure your pumpkin properly and it will become the best you have every eaten.


What you are trying to do is hardened off the skin and turn the fruit an even colour. 


The pumpkin must sound hollow when you tap it and the skin shine will come off if you rub it.


All you got to do is harvest when the plant dies right back.


Only store sound ones.


Put the fruit somewhere for 10-14 days at 26-29 degrees C 


After this store at 7 degrees C until use.


I know it is not easy to find somewhere at 26-29C is not easy, however I tuck mine away in a corner of my sitting room and move to the hall way for the 7C bit.

It seems to work for me.


A shed or a garage is not suitably because they will get too warm in the daytime and too cold at night. 


Friday 8 October 2021

 Rhubarb and beetroot soup:


Believe it or not this is the best soup ever:


500 gram of Rhubarb


500 gram of Beetroot.


1 litre water.


Add what ever spice you like.


Boil for 30 minutes and put in a blender and serve.


Wednesday 6 October 2021

Collect Your Own Seed

  For many gardeners, the garden actually begins in January when the first seed catalog arrives in the mailbox. While the cold wind howls outside, we retire to a cozy chair and leaf through the catalog, carefully notating which varieties of lettuce and tomatoes to try and wishing we had the space to plant each and every flower so artfully displayed on its pages.

But have you ever wondered where your great-grandparents acquired the seeds for their gardens, before there were seed catalogs and fancy garden centers?

They saved seeds for the next year from their own gardens!


Saving seeds from your own flowers or vegetables is a wonderful way to fully experience the cycle of plant growth. It's also much less expensive than buying seeds each spring, and seeds saved from your plants will be well suited to the peculiarities of your own garden's growing conditions. Not only that, it's also quite a simple process.


Save seeds only from vigorous, healthy plants. Some plant diseases may be harbored in the seed where it will then be passed on to the next generation of plants. So don't save seeds from a plant that is obviously diseased or has struggled all season. Collect seeds from the plants that have the characteristics you desire, such as height, hardiness, early or late ripening, flavor or vigor.


Plants that are not hybrids are referred to as open pollinated. Many seed catalogs will identify which of their seeds are hybrids or open pollinated. If you intend to save your own seed, always start with open pollinated seeds. Some of these may also be identified as heirloom seeds. These heirloom varieties have been passed down for generations, often saved within one family for many years before becoming available to the general public.


Cross pollination is another concern for the seed-saving gardener. Cross pollination often results in seeds which have a different genetic makeup than that of the parent plant. Pumpkins, squash and small gourds may cross pollinate with each other, resulting in seeds that will grow to produce rather picturesque fruit. Sweet corn will cross pollinate with field corn or popcorn, and your 6-inch marigolds will cross with your neighbor's 18-inch pompon marigolds. However, crossing will only occur within a species. Cucumbers won't cross with squash, and cosmos won't cross with pansies.


To avoid cross pollination, keep two varieties of the same species separated by as much space as possible. Some species, such as corn, are wind-pollinated and the pollen can travel great distances. These plants must be pollinated by hand and kept isolated from other varieties of their species. This can be done with corn, for example, by tying a small paper bag over selected ears before the silk emerges, then once the silk has appeared it is hand pollinated with pollen from the same plant or its healthy neighbors.

Seeds should be collected on a dry, sunny day. Frost doesn't hurt most seed as long as the seed remains dry. Vegetables such as cucumbers, peppers and tomatoes should be allowed to become slightly overripe before their seeds are collected. Flower seeds and vegetable seed such as lettuce should be collected after the seedheads have become dry, but don't wait too long, as many will shatter, meaning they'll be dropped from the seedpod or seedhead if they remain on the plant too long.


Cucumber, squash and tomato seeds need an additional step before they are ready for storage. First the seeds must be separated from the pulp, then dried. Scoop the seeds from these vegetables, pulp and all. Place the whole mess in a container of water and give it a good stir, then let it settle a bit. The pulp will rise to the top while the seeds will sink to the bottom. Carefully pour off the pulp, and repeat the process until most of the pulp has been poured off. Then strain out the seeds and set them on newspapers to dry.

Seeds should go into storage as dry as possible. Give all seed a post-harvest drying period of at least a week, just to be sure they're dry. Spread them out on a paper plate or newspapers in a warm area out of the sun while they dry.


It's very important to keep the seed dry during storage. Store your dry seeds in tightly sealed jars, metal film containers, or old vitamin bottles. To save space, smaller quantities of several varieties of seeds can be stored in separate envelopes inside a jar. A cool, but never freezing, garage, closed-off spare room or cool basement can all be good places for storing seeds. Or simply keep your sealed jars of seeds in the refrigerator. Temperatures between 32 and 41 degrees Fahrenheit are ideal.



Be sure to label your jars and envelopes so when spring comes around again you'll know which flower seeds and vegetable seeds you're planting, and include the date the seeds were collected. Some seeds will remain viable for several years, but most will grow best if planted right away the following spring.


Try saving some vegetable or flower seeds from your garden this year and grow them next season. This endless cycle can allow you to realize the endless joy of gardening through all the seasons and all the stages of a plant's life.


  Article provided by [http://gardening-articles.com].


Monday 4 October 2021

Growing Watercress:

 The best place to grow watercress is in a chalk stream that is not too deep or swift.


However, for those of us who do not have shuch a benfit, there are other ways to grow and enjoy watercress.


You can grown watercress in pots or very wet soil ( you must keep the crop wet all the time ) 


Plant your watercress in a pot and place im a shady spot, make sure the pot is in a saucer of water which you must frequently refill with fresh water, it will grow quite well for a year or so and then might need starting off again (cuttings roots is extremely easily). Hard water is preferable to soft or rainwater. If there is a frost, protecte your water cress, because the frost will surly kill it.


Friday 1 October 2021

Autumn Raspberries boost:

 You can give your Autumn Raspberries a boost by water them with “manure water”, which is water that has been in a bucket with farm yard manure. 


As we go into winter, look after your kale by keeping pigeons off and stake tall plants against winter gales.


Because kale is high in fibre it is a good food to eat to suppress your appetite if you are worried about your weight.