RE: veggie-digest Digest V101 #67
- Subject: RE: veggie-digest Digest V101 #67
- From: Y* C* K* E*
- Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2001 09:44:35 -0500
- Resent-Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2001 07:43:56 -0700
- Resent-From: v*@eskimo.com
- Resent-Message-ID: <"Wf37B.0.z37.i48kx"@mx1>
- Resent-Sender: v*@eskimo.com
Hi all,
I love volunteers, as my mom calls them.
All tomato volunteers are allowed to grow in my garden; they seem to
start producing as the ones I planted are slowing down. Romas are quite
prolific!
Pam, you answered a question I posted at least a year ago. I'm glad
you got melons; I got some kind of gourd.
I think the best volunteers I've ever gotten were the year I needed
orange in my autumn garden, and I couldn't find mums the color I wanted, so
I put out a trio of the apple-sized pumpkins in a prominent spot. The next
year, I had pumpkin vines and 50 or more mini pumpkins to share with
co-workers, neighbors, etc. They produced new vines and fruit, but fewer
each year for about five years. You don't need to plant anything; just set
them out where you want them to grow, and the winter weather breaks down the
pumpkin, and the seeds sprout in the spring.
Carol
Indianapolis
> -----Original Message-----
> From: veggie-digest-request@eskimo.com
> [v*@eskimo.com]
> Sent: Friday, September 28, 2001 11:37 PM
> To: veggie-digest@eskimo.com
> Subject: veggie-digest Digest V101 #67
>
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