From GENE LOGSDON
I have a hunch that readers thought I was joking when I wrote recently about growing tree seedlings in roof gutters. The picture above proves that it works. I thought by now (late summer) the seedlings would have died for lack of water, but we’ve had regular rain so [...]
Posts tagged ‘Logsdon’
Gene Logsdon: Transplanting Tree Seedlings
Gene Logsdon: Throwing Away Billions of Dollars In Pet Manure
From GENE LOGSDON
Upper Sandusky, Ohio
Not until I was well into writing my new book, Holy Shit: Managing Manure To Save Mankind, which is about how to manage manure for soil enrichment, did I realize that cats, dogs and horses are a very significant source of valuable fertilizer that we are mostly throwing [...]
Gene Logsdon: Good Hoes/Bad Hoes
From GENE LOGSDON
If you look closely at the photo above, you will see what I failed to see for many years. Although I think of myself as a venerable member of the Brethren of the Holy Hoe Society, and have made shiny the handles of more than a few hoes, I took their construction [...]
Gene Logsdon: Happy Homestead Happenstances
From GENE LOGSDON
How many slick tricks have you learned about farming and gardening more or less by accident? My favorite example happened because of laziness. I didn’t clean out the roof gutter on the barn for over a year. I have a longstanding prejudice against roof gutters anyway. Why not just let the water [...]
Gene Logsdon: Despite Gloom, Things Are Looking Up For Garden Farming
From GENE LOGSDON
There were several times so far this year when I almost wished I lived in a high rise luxury apartment in New York far removed from the paltry world of cutworms and purslane. First the crows ate up my whole first planting of open-pollinated field corn and when I [...]
Gene Logsdon: Fireflies In July
From GENE LOGSDON
Observing the lengths that humans will go these days in search of entertainment just totally blows my mind away. I recently learned that people by the thousands stand in line at an amusement park (Cedar Point on Lake Erie) for two hours to take a ride that lasts eight [...]
Gene Logsdon: Pancakes From Perennial Wheatgrass Grain
From GENE LOGSDON
I hope I don’t sound too self-important when I announce an historic moment in our kitchen. Carol just made pancakes with flour from a new and startling source. Wes Jackson, the celebrated plant geneticist, author, farmer (and years ago a fairly good football player), has been experimenting for decades [...]
Gene Logsdon: Acres and Pains
From GENE LOGSDON
There is a delightfully droll old book by that name lamenting the ways that nature humbles and humiliates farmers every step of the way from planting to harvest. I have been a victim of nature’s whims (my whims really) this spring and I’ve got the acres and the aches [...]