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Stovepipe

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  1. I've dabbled in vegetable gardening for many years but only got serious about it in about the past 5 or so. It's gotten very addictive and each year since 2008 I've expanded my space. Historically I've just done the usual summertime tomatoes and peppers but I ventured into cool season stuff spring 2013 that got me hooked in a big way. Now I'm growing and preserving everything I possibly can. It's bordering on getting out of control haha. I did not start out using an organic approach but have migrated to that over time simply because I've found I have much better results using those principles. For me, hands down the two main keys to success with vegetable gardening are composting and mulching. We focus heavily on building compost year round using neighbors' grass clippings, leaves, kitchen waste, yard debris, wood chips, and straw. I plant everything in deep compost and mound it up around them regularly to fertilize. For the mulching, I've been getting large loads of free wood chips from the tree service people. This has been a massive improvement to my gardens as I've left no soil exposed and everything stays nice and wet. I rarely even have to water anymore and weeding is easier than ever. The chips break down overtime and combine with the compost to build good rich soil. I've found preserving to be very rewarding. In the past I've water bath canned garlic dill pickles and tomatoes that we've enjoyed year round. I never had enough from my own garden to put up what I wanted to so I supplemented with farmer's market goods. This year, barring major disease, pest, or weather issues, I should have more than enough produce to put up over 100 quarts of various things. My primary focus at the moment is salsa. I hope to put up 50 quarts or more of salsa using all homegrown ingredients. Then, garlic dill pickles. I like them very garlicy and very dilly. Then whole tomatoes for soups and chili then some pasta sauce as well. I recently bought a pressure canner to ensure I can safely can anything else. It worked very well for doing mustard greens and chicken stock last month. Looking forward to using it for green beans and corn as well as soups later on. We will also be freezing a bunch of stuff. My current gardens consist of a series of raised beds, some built with landscaping logs, some with old pallet and fence wood, and some with large pine stumps. I have 3 raised rows that I've been building soil into slowly over time. And finally a new decently large plot (for suburban standards) for putting excess seedings and tomato suckers, basically just overflow space. I'm fortunate to have a good sized yard for suburban west Knoxville at 3/4 of an acre. My gardens are all currently in the back yard but I will be expanding to the front yard for more veggies next spring as well as the side yard for berries this fall. Hope to get some fruit and nut trees started too at some point. For last fall/winter I had the following in the ground: Garlic, onions, spinach, mustard greens, collards, swiss chard, lettuce, and a crimson clover cover crop. The spinach, garlic, and onions made it through winter just fine. The spinach got waste high, the garlic was harvested last week, and the onions are still making. This spring I had kale, lettuce, collards, and mustard greens. Only the Kale remains. Here are a few cool season photos: Garlic patch: Garlic harvest last week: Spinach beginning to bolt Mustard Greens: Some of the Crimson Clover planted as a cover crop to fix nitrogen:
  2. Let's talk about gardening! I know we have quite a few gardeners around here. I'm sure we all have advice to share. Post what you're growing and let us see some pics! I'll edit this initial post over time and add any gardening links or resources that are relevant to our region. Some links: University of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Publications - Warm and cool season vegetable growing guides tailored for our area - Pages and pages of information on soil management and pest control - Good ideas for planning your garden USDA National Center for Home Food Preservation - THE source for proper canning guidelines to ensure food safety - Also covers drying, smoking, pickling, etc. Old World Garden Farms - An excellent source of information on vegetable gardening, canning, recipes, pallet projects, and other DIY - I'm a big fan of their "post hole digger" planting method, I've had great success with it Back To Eden Film - This film drives home the benefits of wood chip mulching and organic gardening in general - If you can stomach the religious stuff (not my thing) you can learn some good gardening methods that work Carvers Links: http://www.southernexposure.com http://www.seedsavers.org http://parkseed.com http://www.sandhillpreservation.com http://www.johnnyseeds.com http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/victorygarden/ http://leapingwatersfarm.com/?page_id=16. (Our meat CSA...highly recommend this.) http://www.seedsofchange.com
  3. Welcome Jed, glad you joined us!
  4. I'm impressed with some of y'alls memory and record keeping skills, wow. I do good to recall general details of storms 3 years ago lol. We should make a severe version of this thread come spring time.
  5. Another great thread idea Carvers and those pics brought a proud smile to my face. What an amazing area we live in.
  6. January 22nd 2000, Smithville Tennessee, my wedding day. I wasn't on weather forums at the time and the local news was not hyping this at all, so everyone in my wedding party was shocked to wake up to moderate snow with 2 inches or so on the ground. Roads got very bad quickly and many friends and family from west TN and north MS weren't able to make it. But, it was a friggin awesome snow storm and the timing was perfect. It snowed on and off all day resulting in probably 4 to 6 inches by the evening in Smithville. I white knuckled it over the plateau in my Maxima to the airport in Knoxville. Good times.
  7. Great thread idea! I'm enjoying the responses so far! The memory is fuzzy, but I was in Knoxville for that one as an undergrad. Wild storm for sure and fridgid temps, it shut down UT campus which was very rare. I recall about a half foot on the ground, in which some of us buried a keg of beer. Seems like there were several snow storms in a row there between January and early February but like I said, my memory is fuzzy and I'm too lazy to look it up. I do know there was enough snow to bury a keg of beer though.
  8. Your passion for this is appreciated my friend!
  9. Good idea, here's Cold Rain's nifty list that was crowd sourced. Some of these won't be relevant to our area but many are. Edit: well that paste kinda failed, stupid iPad. I'll attempt again.
  10. Dwag! You gonna go chasing on the Skyway again this winter? Good to see you posting man.
  11. Bob, a round of beer is on me at the Bearden Beer Market, maybe two.
  12. I'm super pumped about the new sub-forum. A big thank you to the people that made this happen! Let the good times roll!
  13. GFS and NAM text output with Cobb algorithm: http://www.meteor.iastate.edu/~ckarsten/cobb/cobb.php?model=nam&site=ktys
  14. My personal favorite meteogram: http://www.meteor.iastate.edu/~ckarsten/bufkit/image_loader.phtml?site=ktys&nam=on&nam_mos=on&namm=on&gfs_mos=on&gfs=on&gfsm_mos=on&gfsm=on&nws=on&rap=on&obs=on&nam4km=on&con=on&ratio=11&max_t=on&cobb=on&compaction=on&mean_mt=on&max_mt=on&mean=on
  15. Another nice model site: http://www.twisterdata.com/
  16. HRRR model, one of the best for short range: http://rapidrefresh.noaa.gov/HRRR/
  17. For learning the ropes: http://www.theweatherprediction.com/
  18. Have you considered a professional wrestling career? Rowdy Roddy Piper retired I believe so there is a suitable opening for you.
  19. Coming up short on this one, and too lazy to wiki. I'm going to have to write off aren't I....
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