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Impressions of the late afternoon on a cool spring day

Impressions of the late afternoon on a cool spring day
The crab-apple blossoms should open in a few days.
Every day is different in springtime. Here are a few images that sum up a cool spring afternoon in my part of Montana.


Spinach seedlings are starting to look promising.


It's an excellent year for the tulips that line the back shed.


My neighbor's yard is chemical free and attracts native pollinators. Unfortunately, it is because she seems to cultivate a very high concentration of dandelions. I guess I'll take the good with the bad.
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Urban wildcrafting: Foraging for edible weeds, berries, nettles, and fruits in the urban landscape

Sky Full of Bacon's all-vegetarian forage-fest. Inspiring!



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Categories: foraging, food, wildcrafting
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A modern Johnny Appleseed

A modern Johnny Appleseed
Shared by Hotglu via Flickr
I took my son and wife to the Piper's Creek Orchard at Seattle's Carkeek Park recently. It's an old pioneer orchard, recently saved from the blackberries and partially restored by volunteers. Almost every tree is a different kind of historic apple or pear or quince.

Anyway, as we walked in, this dude's lying there on his back in the middle of the orchard. Was he barefoot? My mind may have embellished the memory. But he looked all the world like Johnny Appleseed.

It turns out he's the protector of this orchard and an expert on heirloom apples. He gives free advice to anyone who asks. I asked about my apple problems. He made me feel better.

Here's what Johnny said: The nylon booties I've been using did keep out the apple maggot. He says I got away with my mid-June application this year because the spring was about two weeks late. Generally I should apply the nylon booties June 1. However, it doesn't keep out the coddling moth (or of course the scab). To keep out the moth, he's experimenting with dipping the booties in BT prior to their application. (BT is an organic pest control method, a bacteria that various bugs eat which causes them to lose their appetite and then starve to death.)

The apple maggot tunnels all over the place and destroys the apple. That pest was stopped by my booties.

However the coddling moth, after penetrating my booties, tunneled straight to the core via a visible hole and straight back out again. This is consistent with what I found when I dug into one of those troubled apples a few weeks ago. You can cut around that kind of damage.

The crop is saved! Thanks, Johnny.
Categories: agriculture, garden log, insects, organic, urban gardening
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