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I am reminded I was going to write to my local government to complain that that law is dumb and needs to be repealed.I looked online and it said it was banned in alot of states to protect the timber industry because currants carry a disease that isnt good for pine trees. Was so bummed!
Plus Vermont is that only white spot on the entire eastern half of the country on that map and I live less than 10 minutes from the VT border and have zero pine on my property its all eastern hemlock so, I'm just having my crowns shipped there instead lol and yes most of the varieties are F1s with resistance now anyway!I am reminded I was going to write to my local government to complain that that law is dumb and needs to be repealed.
For context:
Currants aren’t the only host for the White Pine Blister Rust, so are snapdragons and the Indian Paintbrush.
The Indian Paintbrush is a native plant, and its range looks like this:
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New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts are all in there! And as far as I can tell snapdragons have no restrictions on importing them. So why single out currants?
Add to that, there now exist rust-resistant varieties of BOTH white pines (‘Paton's Silver Splendor‘) and currants (the list of those is long enough I will just link the site here).
In short, the restriction was never going to work and we are way past the point where it should have been struck from the books.
I think I've already shared about the wood in my raised beds rotting away after two years. I started rebuilding them with "cinder" blocks.
View attachment 4280415
But I ran out of blocks, and didn't want to put wear & tear on my little SUV.
When I retired I received my accrued PTO (vacation/sick time) in my last paycheck. I decided to invest it in my garden rebuilds.
The blocks were delivered today.
View attachment 4280419
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the cup hooks have worked great! but when the wood starts to rot, they fall out. if i went with any kind of concrete i don't know how i'd attach it. probably big stones all around but that's not the best option.I like the idea of cup hooks to attach bird netting! Last fall, after watching all manner of wildlife steal my strawberries every year, I built a 1-foot-high wooden frame over the bed and covered it in hardware cloth.
Considering the cost of lumber and HWC, the structure could pay for itself at some point during my lifetime. But the berries will be mine, all mine!
I planted garlic last fall for the first time and an eager to see if I did it well enough to produce a decent harvest this spring.
One of Seed Savers' new offerings is "celtuce." Does anyone have any experience with that?