Re: Pumpkin Gentics Page???


pumpkins@mallorn.com wrote:
> 
> Harold,
>             You bet there is a pumpkin genetics page!  Check out this site
> Mike Nepereny has put together.
> Http://www.mindspring.com/~neps/cucurbyte.htm

Sadly, I guess one must be java-enabled to get beyond Mike's first
page?? I am not.

>   I live in Greenwood, Indiana now.  It is nice to see someone else from this
> area growing Ag's on the list.  If you would like some awesome seeds
> genetically, I have some.  Let's talk sometime.  I would like to pick your
> brain.
> 
> Brad Walters

  I am not growing AG. I signed up on this list thinking of pumpkin
pies. I do have a space for growing one or two AG plants. I have been
wanting to grow AG for 50 years and will in 1999 if I find one or more
seeds. This site is on a street corner and would be interesting to the
public. It has chain link fence and is not molested. Were the old AGs
for human and livestock food?
  I am Purdue 1954 Ag Education.  Also Purdue BioPhysics PhD 1966 which
was in molecular biology. Bill McClain and I were the first to assemble
an active bacteriophage from parts (1965, as I recall).
  I am looking forward to exchanging e-mail; however, doing so via the
list lets others benefit. 
  While giant pumpkins fascinate me, I am more interested in eating. Is
any strain of giant pumpkin suitable for eating straight from the
microwave--this is how I eat pumpkin most of the time. I have seed I
plan to plant for my food pumpkins. 

-- 
Harold Eddleman Ph.D. Microbiologist.       i*@disknet.com 
Location: Palmyra IN USA; 36 kilometers west of Louisville, Kentucky
http://www.disknet.com/indiana_biolab



---------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@mallorn.com with the
message text UNSUBSCRIBE PUMPKINS



Other Mailing lists | Author Index | Date Index | Subject Index | Thread Index