Hi Watne.

Clearly you do work hard at growing. Fascinating. I would like to have a bigger vegetable garden for next year. I'm thinking about where in my yard I could put it.

I've never tried growing celery. I would love it. I would like the other veggies you mentioned with the possible exception of cabbage. Yes, I know it is good for me.but I don't eat it very much. I have a head of cabbage in the fridge right now that is so strong I cannot eat it. I'm going to have to throw it away. RAW turnip? I've never eaten raw turnip. I love turnip with gravy but again, I find it hard to buy good turnip. sometimes it is too strong and I can't eat it.

How do I know about the quality of my manure? Actually the manure I'm using is from last year. I bought a huge bag of it and only used a little of it.. and how do I add trace minerals to it? Can I buy trace minerals by the bottle? I suppose a farm store would know.

And would I buy small plants for a garden or start from seed? Actually I don't know how I'd manage seeds becasue I have no place to grow them. And how do I know whether the stuff is genetically modified?

Faith

----- Original Message ----- From: "CWFugitt" <c_wa...@earthlink.net>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Monday, September 03, 2007 9:43 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Examples of Fertilize


Evening Faith,

That is one of my favorite books. I think I suggested it.

At 05:09 PM 9/3/2007, you wrote:
If, as it says in "Never Be sick Again" and elsewhere, illness comes from only two sources: Poor Nutrition and Toxicity from drugs, then what does that say about our food sources? Not much.

  This has been known, even by the USDA for over 50 years.
I have a document from the congressional record whereas a USDA
rep stated, ........

"the food is so bad, so deteriorated, a study cannot even be done on food".

>> All I grow is a few tomatoes and parsley with some cow
>>  manure.  That's it. However, I am, as are the rest of us,
>> interested in our food and nutrition.

  You should try some celery also.  Very easy to grow.
don't forget beets and carrots. of course cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower all grow fast and easy, not to mention turnip greens and delicious raw turnips.

I wonder about the quality of your manure. If there was a soil deficiency, it passed to the cows, horses, whatever, and on to the manure. You could add some trace minerals, and maybe even major minerals.

If I lived nearby, you could plant two plots of tomatoes, one for you to grow and one for me to grow.

I would have to sneak over at night so you did not see the magic nutrients I fed them. <grin>
That would be a ton of fun. ....... would it not ?

Want to make any bets ?

I might even install an automatic feeding system for mine and feed them 10 or 12 times per day.

If you did not know or deduct, I work very hard at growing.

Wayne







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