
caseydog wrote:chorizon wrote:Deer ate all our 'maters! We planted a communal garden at the in-laws in Dripping Springs. Its all fenced in, 'cept the dang ol' 'maters. They were in 5 gal. buckets right outside.
Everything's doing pretty good, but nothing is ready yet. Guess we have a brown thumb. We have been eating some really yummy fresh corn from HEB lately though. Can't get enough! I suppose they're local because they're pretty small due to the drought and all.
Remember: "There are only two things money can't buy. True love and home-grown tomatoes!"
The corn is NOT local. Texas corn is cattle feed. It is nice looking, but no good for humans -- tough as cardboard.
CD
Larwyn wrote:caseydog wrote:chorizon wrote:Deer ate all our 'maters! We planted a communal garden at the in-laws in Dripping Springs. Its all fenced in, 'cept the dang ol' 'maters. They were in 5 gal. buckets right outside.
Everything's doing pretty good, but nothing is ready yet. Guess we have a brown thumb. We have been eating some really yummy fresh corn from HEB lately though. Can't get enough! I suppose they're local because they're pretty small due to the drought and all.
Remember: "There are only two things money can't buy. True love and home-grown tomatoes!"
The corn is NOT local. Texas corn is cattle feed. It is nice looking, but no good for humans -- tough as cardboard.
CD
That's BS! You must be trying to eat feed corn. Feed corn is large grained and tough and intended for livestock. Sweet corn can be, and is grown in Texas and is as good or better than any corn imported from out of state. The sooner you eat the corn after it is harvested the sweeter it will be.
caseydog wrote:Larwyn wrote:caseydog wrote:chorizon wrote:Deer ate all our 'maters! We planted a communal garden at the in-laws in Dripping Springs. Its all fenced in, 'cept the dang ol' 'maters. They were in 5 gal. buckets right outside.
Everything's doing pretty good, but nothing is ready yet. Guess we have a brown thumb. We have been eating some really yummy fresh corn from HEB lately though. Can't get enough! I suppose they're local because they're pretty small due to the drought and all.
Remember: "There are only two things money can't buy. True love and home-grown tomatoes!"
The corn is NOT local. Texas corn is cattle feed. It is nice looking, but no good for humans -- tough as cardboard.
CD
That's BS! You must be trying to eat feed corn. Feed corn is large grained and tough and intended for livestock. Sweet corn can be, and is grown in Texas and is as good or better than any corn imported from out of state. The sooner you eat the corn after it is harvested the sweeter it will be.
It isn't BS from my experience. I have thousands of acres of corn fields around my house, and it's ALL feed corn.
Good corn seems to come from a cooler environment. If there is good Texas Sweet corn, I have not found it in the thirty-plus years I have lived here.
But, I am open minded, so if you know where I can get good sweet corn that's grown in Texas, I will try it. Until then, I stand by what I said before.
I have eaten a lot of good Texas produce, but corn isn't on that list.
CD
BillyLandry wrote:My wife and I have been eating fresh vegetables out of the garden for a few weeks now. We had snap beans, zucchani, cucumbers and the
tomatoes are ready to be picked. I also harvested my 2 sixty foot rows of
corn, I ended up with about 18 dozen ears of corn. The type of corn that I
planted is called Merrit(spelling may be wrong). It is very good and when
you shuck it, the corn hair falls off very easily, so you have very little cleaning to do.
The things I did not succeed with was Bell Peppers and Okra because of
my neighbor letting his tame rabbits run wild. But I ended up shooting
two of the rabbits, cleaned them and put them in the freezer. I replanted the Okra , but I think it is to late to plant Bell Peppers.
Coca Cola Teardrop wrote:we have a weed garden with a few misplaced veggies.
Not enough rain so I've been trying to keep tomatoes, squash and okra alive by watering every evening. (I gave up on the corn) I don't even like squash and okra, I cook it for Charles and the girls.
I've decided I'll be better off financially if I quit watering and just go to the farmers market.
When it gets hot we don't have a big appetite in the evenings. We get by with fresh veggies and cornbread
Linda
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