It’s really cold out there - but at least it’s sunny. My thermometer reads 7 degrees and the wind chill
is supposed to be -10 out there and I believe it. I had to bundle up like an Eskimo to go to
the barn this morning. Most of the
animals appear to be fine- they have dry draft free quarters in the barn and
straw to burrow into. I worry a bit
about the one cat that showed up here before Christmas. She isn’t used to being outside. But her
chances are better out there than inside with my dogs. I brought out warm chicken noodle soup to the
cats this morning- yes I am spoiling them- and gave them a hot meal. Some of the chickens helped eat that, the
little cannibals.
Our weather is supposed to moderate by the weekend and we may
get some snow Thursday. We actually need
a bit of snow anyway as our winter is not replenishing our soil moisture as it
should be. When you make plans for those
gardens in the spring think about setting up a drip irrigation system or at
least a sprinkler system in case the drought continues.
Winter on the farm |
My brother tells me that Australia
is having drought conditions again this year.
His grass has dried up and he is having trouble feeding his cows. People around here are reporting having
trouble feeding their animals too, as hay is scarce and expensive. If you are in need of hay try this site Michigan Hay Sellers List or call Phil Kaatz at the Lapeer MSU Extension
office 810-667-0341.
Red Squirrels
I posted an article at the end of the newsletter about red
squirrel damage to spruce trees and I want to add that I have been noticing
lots of feeding damage on cedars (arborvitae) also. The squirrels chew off the tips of cedars to
get at the tiny cones. They also eat the
buds off maple and other trees. This
year there may be more damage than usual because the mast (nuts and acorns)
production was low this fall due to our weird spring weather.
While other types of squirrels may also due some damage to
trees the red squirrels are the worst offenders. Red squirrels are the small reddish squirrels
with white bellies and a white ring around their eyes. They are nothing but arboreal rats. They will also enter your attic and even get
into basements and crawl spaces, just like rats. I have some in my attic again this winter and
its driving my dogs nuts. In the warmer
parts of the day they are active running around and fighting up there and the
dogs are jumping on my plant tables and windowsills trying to get closer to the
squirrels they hear in the attic. I now
have lots of coleus cuttings in water because they knocked over a large plant.
I read up on red squirrels- you can follow the links from
the article below too- and I found out that they will actually eat baby rabbits
and that one of their favorite foods is mushrooms. They will eat anything, which I know, and are
quite vicious with each other and other animals. They say people hunt them for meat - but with
9 types of tapeworms and 25 types of fleas to name some parasites that frequent
them, I wouldn’t want to eat one.
Rat poison doesn’t seem to work on them. Rat traps will kill them but they are quite
good at avoiding them. Shooting works if
you can hit them. Some people say to put
out corn, nuts and sunflower seed to keep them from eating your trees but other
studies have found that’s not very effective.
You don’t stop much of the damage and it allows them to raise more
babies with the extra food.
New concerns about
Imidacloprid
Imidacloprid and thiamethoxam belong to a class of pesticides called neonicotinoids. These are insect growth regulators, and were
touted as fairly safe
pesticides. They are generally applied
as systemic products and not sprayed on. Imidacloprid is registered for use on 140
crops and used in 120 countries. Now two studies done at the, at the University of
Stirling, UK and at INRA in Avignon, France and published in Science say that the pesticide is part of the reason that bees are
disappearing and failing to reproduce well.
The latest studies found that when
bees consume pollen and nectar from plants treated with neonicotinoids they
tend to lose their memory, failing to find their way back to the hive or not
remembering how to perform their hive jobs. The hive often doesn’t produce enough food for
its workers and slowly dies. A hive
exposed to the pesticides also fails to produce new queens. The loss of bees and other pollinators is a
serious threat to agriculture and raises the cost of food. Poor pollination can also affect other plant
species other than crop foods and may lead to reduced numbers or extinction of
native plants.
Bayer and Syngenta, the largest
producers of neonicotinoids, dispute the latest research, saying their own research
failed to find significant damage to bees. European countries are considering a ban on
the pesticides. Many, many trees are
treated with imidacloprid products - remember what was recommended for Emerald
Ash borer?- and still are. It’s not
known if other animals experience any effects of the products but gardeners may
want to think seriously about using these products. Never use these products on anything that
produces food or even near food crops.
Quinoa
Quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa) is a grain
crop grown primarily in the high areas of Peru . For a long
time it supported the indigenous peoples of the area very well. Quinoa has an unusually high protein content
for a grain and that protein contains all the essential amino acids that meat
does. Suddenly quinoa has become a food fad, especially among vegans and
vegetarians, using it as meat replacement.
The demand for quinoa has caused
the cost of the grain to skyrocket in Peru and South
America in general, making
it hard for poor people to buy the nutritious grain and instead they must buy
imported foods of lesser nutritional value. Even those who grow the crop are
choosing to sell it to major marketers instead of eating it themselves or
selling it to local markets. While it may
produce some additional income for them, the farmers are not getting rich; they
are paid very poorly compared to what the grain sells for in trendy European
and American health food stores.
Quinoa is not an easy crop to
grow and there are no large growers outside of Peru . That’s not
to say that with research and some trials that quinoa couldn’t be produced in
other places. But now with the high cost
of fuel to transport it thousands of miles from where it is grown and the
damage that removing the crop from its native land is doing to the nutrition of
poor people it’s not a positive food choice for Americans and Europeans.
Before I had read about the
problems that food faddists had caused with this grain I had circled quinoa in
the Territorial Seed catalog as a crop I wanted to try this year.(www.TerritorialSeed.com) It is actually quite ornamental with spires
of pretty red, fuchsia, burgundy, cream or yellow flowers. The leaves are eaten like spinach as well as
the plant producing a nutty flavored grain when mature.
Territorial gives a few cultural suggestions
but doesn’t mention that this is generally a cool climate crop, even though it
takes a long time, about 120 days, to produce a grain crop. I don’t know if successful grain production could
be obtained here. But for you
vegetarians and vegans- or others- who want to try the crop, growing it here
would be preferable to buying imported quinoa.
Why not give this unusual crop a try this summer? Let me know how your trial went and I’ll let
you know how mine goes. For those market
gardeners out there this might be a crop that could bring you some cash, if you
can get it to grow successfully.
More heritage flowers
Last week I wrote about heritage flowers in this
newsletter and I published a similar article on my Examiner garden column. Scott Knust, of Old House Gardens , wrote me to
say how much he enjoyed the article, and sent me a catalog. Looking through the catalog made me remember
other heritage flowers of my youth, especially the summer bulbs.
My paternal grandmother was not much of a gardener
but every year she planted dahlias, rows of them in my grandfather’s vegetable
garden. She would go to Canada in the
spring and bring back new varieties to plant by swapping some of her old ones
with Canadian relatives. In late summer
she made great bouquets of the flowers in her house, with dozens of colors and
styles of dahlias.
One season working in the Extension office I helped
a gentleman with a problem he was having with his dahlias and he returned the
favor by bringing me a bucket of all kinds of beautiful dahlia flowers. Since then I have grown some dahlias every
summer and I am slowly expanding my collection.
A modern dahlia, variety unknown. |
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