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Monday, July 9, 2012

ABCs Of Bulb Gardening

ABCs Of Bulb Gardening

Flowering plants that overwinter and multiply by means on fleshy stems of leaves are called bulbs. The bulbs we grow in our gardens today are native to temperate zones all over the world, the woodlands, meadows and mountains of the Mediterranean, Middle East, and North America. The Dutch have been extremely successful over the centuries in collection and hybridizing new species of bulbs and improving them for reliable garden performance. Tulips in particular, once played an important role in the Dutch economy.

There is no easier plant to cultivate than a bulb. Planted at the right time, in a loose, well-draining soil, bulbs will bloom punctually year after year and even spread (“naturalize”) if conditions are to their liking.

By planting a sequence of spring-, summer- and fall-flowering bulbs at the appropriate time, you can enjoy their blooms practically year ‘round.

Fall (late September through late November) – Plant hardy, spring-flowering bulbs: tulips, narcissus (includes all types of daffodils), crocus, eranthis (winter aconites), erythronium, fritillaria, hyacinths snowdrops, scilla, hardy cyclamen, lilies. In California and milder areas of the Southwest, also plant ranunculus, freesias, anemones and paperwhites outdoors. Store tulips, crocus and hyacinths in refrigerator for 6-8 weeks before planting. In all regions, store potted bulbs in refrigerator for forcing indoors.

Winter – In California, plant prechilled- hardy bulbs outdoors. In all regions, remove sprouted bulbs from refrigerator for indoor forcing.

Spring – Plant more tender, summer-flowering bulbs: achimenes, gladioli, alliums, calla lilies, tuberous begonias, ixia, crocosmia, dahlias, cannas.

Late Summer – Plant the late bloomers: fall crocus, fall- and winter-blooming hardy cyclamen.

Click here to browse bloomingbulb.com for #1 quality plants and bulbs.

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Sunday, July 8, 2012

Make your air conditioning dollars go farther - Yahoo! Shine

Make your air conditioning dollars go farther - Yahoo! Shine

every little bit of savings helps.

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Strawberries!

Home-grown, vine-ripened strawberries are among the garden's supreme treats- sweet, succulent, and bursting with flavor. Serve them in shortcakes, blended into smoothies, on ice cream, in cheesecakes or crepes, topped with yogurt or whipped cream, or simply savor them "as is" fresh from the garden. Grocery store strawberries, which are harvested early and ripened off the vine, can't begin to compare in sweetness and flavor.

Strawberries are also easy to grow in the home garden. The plants form foot-wide mounds of lush dark green foliage that can serve as an attractive ground cover. They require no staking or training, as do the larger berries, and only basic care. Once planted they will spread and continue to produce for four or five years before they need to be replaced.

Strawberry plants also grow well in pots, patio planters, even in hanging planters. While there are many varieties of strawberries, there are basically only two types: June-bearing (Allstar) and Everbearing (Ozark and Quinalt). The June-bearing strawberries bloom in the spring and produce a plentiful crop that ripens during June. The Everbearing strawberries produce both a spring and a fall crop, and continue producing some berries throughout the summer, more when temperatures aren't too hot. For the home gardener, the best strategy is to plant both types and harvest ripe berries over a long season.


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Saturday, July 7, 2012

Solar Flare Erupts From Giant Sunspot, Marks The Summer's Strongest Flare Yet

Solar Flare Erupts From Giant Sunspot, Marks The Summer's Strongest Flare Yet

wonder what kind of havoc this might cause?? Maybe none, who knows.

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Sun Tea!

We have been making a brew of sun tea every single day in this heat wave. The sun is so hot that it is really brewing up some great tea.

Sun tea is not hard to do. Just put 4 to 6 tea bags into a clean 2 quart glass container. Fill with water and cap. Place outside where the sunlight can strike the container for about 3 to 5 hours. Move the container if necessary to keep it in the sun. When the tea has reached its desired strength, remove from sun and put it in the refrigerator.

I broke our actual Sun Tea Pitcher so we have to use a vintage pitcher that I cover with plastic wrap. But, hey , IT WORKS!





The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster

Friday, July 6, 2012

Poverty Prepper

Here is something that we can all use. This Kindle Ebook is only 99 cents. So it won;t break the bank. The Poverty Prepping: How to Stock up For Tomorrow When You Can't Afford To Eat Today might be something for you to read to get a start on prepping without spending a lot of money to do it.

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120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Cute Baby Corn! (and yummy)

My son was so proud when we went out today and he actually got to pick some of his baby corn that he had grown. He has a green thumb. It is so awesome. No matter what he plants grows like crazy. No watering or anything just grows.

He made me fix these few just for him for dinner. All I did was melt some butter in a pan and kind of saute the little ears in it with a pinch of salt. He loved it. Said that next spring he is going to plant about a million of the baby corn!! He could probably do it. These are the ones that I have bought him the last 2 years -- Baby Corn Seeds. Every single seed has grown. Very hardy plants.

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

My Food Storage

Deluxe survival kit with food storage and water


You have got to have a food storage. It is the best insurance that you can have in case of any type of an emergency. My Food Storage has many types of survival kits that will fit any size family and budget. Make sure that your family is taken care of with My Food Storage.

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Fried Green Tomato Parmesean



I was given some green tomatoes this morning. My neighbor has a ton of huge tomatoes growing on her deck. I am so jealous of them. All that we have growing are cherry tomatoes. Not sure if you can do this recipe with them. Maybe. Might be good. Be bite sized. LOL

Fried Green Tomato Parmesean

3 medium green tomatoes that you have sliced in about 1/4 inch thick slices

1/4 cup of cornmeal

1/4 cup of grated parmesean cheese

2 tablespoon flour

3/4 teaspoon of garlic salt

some pepper

1 beaten egg

1/4 cup of vegetable oil

Lightly sprinkle the tomato slices with salt and place on a paper towel for 30 to 60 minutes. This is to drain them well. While they are draining combine the dry ingredients in a shallow dish. Put the beaten egg into another bowl. Dip each tomato slice into the egg and then into the dry mix. In a medium skillet , heat the oil on medium high. Fry the coated tomatoes a few at a time until golden brown. Drain on a paper towel. Serve immediately.

We are going to have ours for dinner with chicken.

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Monday, July 2, 2012

Trying To Keep Cool! (also a FREE movie for you)

Trying so hard to keep cool inside. have the windows all covered. Just relaxing and watching movies all weekend was fun. Spending time with family is always great. We had to go out yesterday to get a tire repaired on hubbies truck and stopped by thrift store and got a box full of vhs tapes , about 75 of them. I lost count because my daughter was over and she was grabbing ones she wanted to watch. I think she took about 20. But anyway got all of them for $6.00!!! Pretty good deal. So we got the old VCR out and started watching movies. Armageddon , Deep Impact, and some Veggie Tales for the Little Man. A bad storm blew thru last night dropping hail on us that was the size of ping pong balls. So all of those disaster movies kind of had us freaked out. We had watched Knowing already yesterday morning. So it was a disaster movie day in our house. The Veggie Tales really were good after all of that mayhem. LOL. Here is Knowing for you to watch. Great movie. I had downloaded it to our Roku , but you can watch it here for FREE. Have fun and keep cool!



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Sunday, July 1, 2012

All the world's quakes since 1898 mapped - Technology & science - Science - OurAmazingPlanet - msnbc.com

All the world's quakes since 1898 mapped - Technology & science - Science - OurAmazingPlanet - msnbc.com

This is pretty awesome. 

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120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Homestead Survival: Camping Hand Washing Field Sink DIY Project

Homestead Survival: Camping Hand Washing Field Sink DIY Project

I have got to share this - this is so awesome.

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120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Staying Clean Off The Grid

I found something out by accident yesterday afternoon! You could use a kiddie pool to warm water up and use to take a bath in a Living off the Gridsituation. My little man has a Little Tykes turtle kiddie pool that has a cover for it. Well, I got out there and realized it still had the water in it from last week when my little man was swimming and it was hot! First thing I thought was dang this could be great for using as a bath in a SHTF situation! It was really hot water after being in the triple digits here all week. Would even be good to wash clothes in if you had to. Use any type of kiddie pool and have it covered to keep the water inside and it will warm up in the sun. Br great to cover it with something black. Also can paint milk cartons black and set them outside filled with water to warm up small amounts for cleaning dishes and more.

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak

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