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Dang right cause there ain't nuthin wrong wiff meat, spuds n gravy. Dats survival food right there. Ya caint survive on all dat foo foo junk!
Hmm...not all true.
Folks like to plant their comfort foods, but it also depends on what are in the stores.
There are lots of "interesting" home grown foods out there.
Trouble is ... home grown foods stay at home and not shared in the farmers markets.
So they are growing it, you just not seeing it. LOL And they is not sharing.
Folks also grow their old timers because they know it works in their garden and they can always buy the more interesting varieties in the stores.
Garden size is the determining factor in most cases. If you just have a teeny plot, you dont want to put "untested" varieties in it.
Just got to look in the right places and you'll see some cool things growing in backyards.
I started a pea patch in Redmond and there were lots of expats. 70%+ were from another country. You should see the variety of plants there!
I tried white eggplants this year...Cool plant, no fruit. I also tried ichiban japanese eggplants...loads of fruit.
I know for a fact in the central part of seattle, you will see lots of very interesting foods grown in the pea patches. Some of those seeds are saved and passed from neighbour to neighbour.
I saw a paw paw plant in Bellevue, PUR-simmons, walnuts, asian pears & dates, etc & in Beacon Hill, its just that if we grow "interesting" fruits...we risk not harvesting due to our climate zone.
I never harvested my "failed" persimmons, giant pumpkins, grapes...the list goes on and on. I try new things, but I also have a big lot to plant in.
Also, some plants are just not available. I have been trying to get a nice chestnut tree for a while ... w/o having to pay too much for shipping.
Raintree is very good, but prices add up fast.
Mike from Burnt Ridge still does order pick-up at the Oly Framer's Market, I think, which is one way to get around shipping costs. Another is to noise around, in June, and get a group together to co-op on a rental truck and go pick up a load of discount plants at the clearance sale- a minivan full of shoppers and a truck to haul plants back and do not, whatever you do, go pick up plants for anyone without having cash in hand, unless you can afford to lose said money. I used to go down to the clearance sale every year as well as the Memorial Day sale at Lawyer's until I ended up with too many plantings where I'd heeled in the rest of a bunch of ten and never got around to finding homes for the surplus.
OH: Lawyer's. This is a commercial nursery which grows the better sort of commercial landscape plants (I bet CGG knows about them) and has a massive discount sale every Memorial Day, with stuff like bundles of six own-root tree peonies for $25, and I think they have chestnut trees. Again, you need to go and get, but in this case it's just go and get in Evergreen Valley instead of God-foresaken Morton.
(Anyone who goes to the RT clearance remember what I said about microclimates up above: the nursery is HOT in June, and the same topography which protects it from arctic weather also shields it from refreshing breezes. Bring water, dress in layers, wear a hat).