My peanuts are blooming!
>>1488118*tips hat*
>>1488143>>1488331Sounds fun. I just got some blueberry bushes and rhubarb roots in the mail. I need to go out and start digging as soon as this rain goes away. Good luck with the honeycrisp. They are delicious, but evidently they are really difficult to manage and get fruit from hence a lot of their cost in grocery stores. Make sure to research them a bit extra to help prevent any problems in the future.
>>1488152Sounds good, just don't plant too much in one area. That's always the newbie thing to do. Focus on attaining/making good soil so you have more area to plant.
>I'm realizing I dont eat that many different veggies, and my diet is mostly meat.lol I know that feeling. I found it is best to eat less meat, but pair the meat I eat with the veggies. Like stew is a really good one for adding tons of veggies, but only requiring a little bit of meat, so long as the broth is good. Spaghetti sauce is another one.
>>1488185>>1488259>>1488290That is looking pretty good.
>>1488195I'm still getting freezing temps in my polytunnels and I haven't been able to set my plants for hardening out due to bad weather.
>>1488260>>1488296The glue should be fine and should decompose too. As far as knowing what may or may not be in the paper in regards to stuff you don't want in the garden, you'd just need to have it tested at great expense. While some are worse than others, most chemicals and methods of paper making are pretty horrible. Plants and especially fungi uptake these chemicals and heavy metals (bioremediation for polluted lands for instance) and you'd be eating them in concentrated forms.
I thought tossing my shredded paper into the compost pile or turning it into edible pearl oyster mushrooms was going to be a god send until I researched it a great deal. The results really soured my mood. Instead I just reduced my use of paper products and increased my use of wood from my own property (deadfall and coppicing).