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  1. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    My report on 2019's spuds (so far). Well, I asked for advice about red potato varieties, and I tried one variety recommended to me on this thread. (By the way, thanks to all of you who responded with recommendations & experiences.) All varieties showed impressive top growth. Red Norlands...
  2. Joel_BC

    Angle-grinder users: handy trick

    I know what you mean. Looks like a good prank to electrocute the impulsive sort. :oops:
  3. Joel_BC

    Angle-grinder users: handy trick

    Anybody here rely on an angle grinder? I have three of them, two different makes. They all use the same size & type of wrench for tightening/changing disks. Normally, I do keep one in a tool tray with various disks, but these wrenches are small and it's happened that I’ve temporarily misplaced...
  4. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    I learned that the Adirondack Red is both red skinned and red fleshed... which is interesting. The reds I've known about are just red on the outside. Thought I'd give them a try. So I did put some time into a search for A.R. seed potatoes from a western Canadian source, but it seems that the...
  5. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    Thanks for the recommendation of the Adirondacks. I'll look into seeing if I can get seed for that here in the far west and above the 49th parallel.
  6. Joel_BC

    BTE, hugelkulture, hydroponics and other unconventional gardening

    Thanks for the reply. Where I live, what we call a "buttercup" is a flowering herb, mostly regarded by gardeners as a weed. (I'm sure it may have herbal uses...) At least 90% of gardeners I know try to weed it out. To me 20# means 20 pounds, so I visualized 20# of that kind of buttercup...
  7. Joel_BC

    BTE, hugelkulture, hydroponics and other unconventional gardening

    I became intrigued by the idea of hugelkulture two or three years ago — but I didn't try it. Reason being I don't think our soil situation would be conducive to making it work. But I believe I started a thread with a question about what SS members may have tried it. You can probably search...
  8. Joel_BC

    Some pics of our place (British Columbia)

    Usually the ground is dry and warm enough to till and plant early seeds in mid April. Unless it's a very rainy April — in which case the ground might be a bit soggy until around the first of May. We tend to harvest the last of our outdoor-grown stuff by mid November, though killing frost can...
  9. Joel_BC

    Some pics of our place (British Columbia)

    Thanks. Yeah, those were clean specimens. Sometimes we have a fair number where the skins have split, but it's rare that we get scabs from bugs biting them. We grow jalapeno peppers and cucumbers in the greenhouse too. Usually the cuke leaves wind up mottled with yellow areas, but the plants...
  10. Joel_BC

    Weldnator

    Congratulations on the complex project. What have you used the arc-welding capability to do, as yet? :)
  11. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    I think of the Yukons as a "serviceable" large, and (normally) good yielding variety. We've never disliked their flavor, Bee. The Russets are "okay" flavor-wise, good-yielding, but when baked they're just dry-ish (begging for gravy, lots of butter, sour-cream dressing or whatever). Even when...
  12. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    Thanks for that Potato Organization link. Very informative. We keep our home-grown spuds, for as long as possible, in our cold room (concrete floor — so not really a root cellar). This is sort of necessary, because we have about five months of no productive gardens outdoors, and a bit over...
  13. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    The scab that we're familiar with up here is caused by a bacterium that thrives when the soil is a little too high-pH (alkaline). So i have to use sulfur each year to prevent or reduce scabbing. I'd guess that if you're not deliberately cultivating your potatoes, then probably your soil pH is...
  14. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    Thanks. I haven't grown either of those varieties. I do know that some gardeners in my valley grow the Norlands, but I haven't discussed the variety with anybody. The info I could find on the Red Pontiacs seems to indicate that they're "choice" in terms of flavor and texture, but rarely grow...
  15. Joel_BC

    Red potatoes — have any favourites you grow?

    I grow Russets and Yukon Golds (neither of them “reds”) as mainstays… Russets are the stalwart French-fry variety all over North America, and Yukons are a yellow-flesh spud. Usually, both these varieties size-up and produce abundantly for me. This year, the Russets did well, the Yukons not up...
  16. Joel_BC

    Hot weather, reduced spud yield — anyone else?

    This year, we had unusually hot late spring weather, and relentless heat into early summer. Our Russet potatoes did well — I’m estimating six-to-one return (by weight), probably more. Low scab and no other obvious virus or bacterial problems. Other spud varieties all did quite...
  17. Joel_BC

    What's for dinner?

    Nothing unusual, but very enjoyable. Last night...
  18. Joel_BC

    Cordless electric chainsaw

    "Bigger" yes. There are some less compact & heavier cordless electric saws... more power, true. "Better" is maybe always a combination of things. Tends to boil down to what suits you & your needs. Husqvarna is a good brand. BC, Canada, where I live has had a very major forest-products...
  19. Joel_BC

    Cordless electric chainsaw

    I had to do some tree trunk and limb cutting when I was at the end of some sort of food poisoning or stomach flu… in any case, I was very weak. My usual chainsaw (a Stihl with an 18” bar), which isn’t really all that big, weighs a bit over 16 lb with oil & fuel in it. Holding and carrying it...
  20. Joel_BC

    Presenting The Bee

    This 1992 Mitsubishi Delica van — right-hand steering wheel — has been repainted by the owner, and is now called “The Bee”. It’s the delivery vehicle for a commercial nursery and market garden that provides the majority of support for three adults and two young children (my neighbors). The Bee...
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