30/
oh, also, basil
@LibertyFarmNH makes this amazing pesto, straight from the garden to the table in 15 minutes and O.M.G.https://twitter.com/sympathetic_opp/status/1329431484307038209 …
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41/ It depends on what "small" means. For just a bushel or two, I think scythe is going to be the win. The tractor implements to process wheat are multiple, and not cheap. Not sure of the full list, but minimum mower, collector, some way to winnow...https://twitter.com/688as/status/1329511654002921474 …
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42/ Wife has a scythe and has harvested small amount of wheat for making bread this is the place to get a scythehttps://scythesupply.com/build-a-custom-outfit.html …
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43/ Wife
@LibertyFarmNH grows the lettuce here; I'll defer to herhttps://twitter.com/PineWoodsRunner/status/1329517290279346177 …Show this thread -
44/ Arid isn't a problem - you can irrigate. Windy might be a problem, or might not be. The big problem I see is that, combined with arid, it could dry things out. I'd experiment w wind brakes. Re shady: there are lists of plants that tolerate it >https://twitter.com/TheMcGirkEffect/status/1329518581034352640 …
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45/ cabbage, carrots, etc. So: don't fight the shade and try to grow tomatoes, embrace it and grow what will work.
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End of conversation
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Read Sepp Holzer's book. Tried a small test bed. Not seeing a dramatic difference, but then I didn't pile the woody material as high as Holzer does. Results inconclusive.
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