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Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

Prune These 17 Perennials In Summer To Encourage More Showstopping Blooms Next Season​


July 20, 2025 | Source: House Digest | by Deirdre Mundorf
You’ve probably heard that you should think twice before pruning your garden in the summer heat. This is good advice, as several plants should not be cut back during the hot summer months since it can encourage new growth that is too tender to survive winter. However, there are some perennials that can benefit from summer pruning. Cutting these perennials back or deadheading them during the summer months can encourage additional blooms in the same season or ensure that they’re in good shape to develop absolutely showstopping blooms next year.
Some of the perennials that you should start thinking about pruning over the summer include delphiniums, daisies, azaleas, and lantana. However, keep in mind that the specific timing and pruning needs of these plants can vary. Some should be pruned several times over the summer, while others should only be pruned once. Some should be pruned in the early summer, while others should be pruned towards the middle or end of it. Educate yourself so you’ll know what to do and when you should do it in order to get the most beautiful blooms from your perennials.
CONTINUE READING
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Hi Jimi,

We created this complimentary resource to make garden planning simpler, smarter, and more fun.

>>> Download your Companion Planting Guide today

Inside, you’ll discover:
🌿 Which crops grow well together—and which ones don’t
🌸 How flowers and herbs can boost your veggie harvest
🧄 Why herbs are powerful allies for both flavor and pest control
🐝 Tips to attract pollinators and beneficial insects
🧺 Beautiful plant combos that improve soil and sustainability

Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned grower, this guide helps you create a more balanced, productive garden—without extra work!

Here’s to growing with ease and joy!
mail

🌱 The Grow Your Own Vegetables Team 🌱
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
What are the 5 keys to a successful garden space, Jimi?

If you’re new to gardening, you might not know. And if you miss even one of these, your garden won’t grow the abundance you want!

That’s why we created the THRIVE! Garden Freedom Series AND why we’re giving everyone a sneak peek inside.

>>>
mail
Check out the 5 Keys to a Successful Garden Space video here


Video Thumbnail: 5 Keys to a Successful Garden Space

Here’s what the Grow Your Own vegetables community has to say about this series:

“My goal is to start growing my own vegetables for myself as soon as possible. The classes are really great. They are easy to understand and every step to start the process is very explicit.” – Cherrie D.

“ I did get some good ideas that will hopefully guide me until the Fall, when I intend to plant cover crops to feed the soil. I found your presentation to be most informative, and very inspiring.” – Annem J.


It’s our mission at Grow Your Own Vegetables to help YOU get more harvest with less effort. That’s why we’re giving you a sneak peek inside.

🗝️ Watch the 5 Keys to a Successful Garden Space video now 🗝️

Here’s to your garden success!

🌱 The Grow Your Own Vegetables Team 🌱
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

Powdery Mildew On Your Plants? Here’s What To Do​

 

gopher_byrd

Cranky Old Fart
VU Donator
Diamond Contributor
ECF Refugee
Member For 5 Years
VU Patreon
I love those chocolate cherries, I wish I woulda grew some now, sweet wonderful taste ;)
Those are called black cherry tomatoes. I got them from MIGardner.com. They are heirloom so I can save some seeds and plant them next year. I only grew two vines and that is acting they are enough. Definitely my best producer this year. I've been picking them for at least 2 months and I'm sure I'm well over 250 tomatoes off those two vines.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

It's not just the honey bees...

Our world depends on little unsung heroes: pollinators. They help sustain our crops and all the plants and wildlife that are part of the same delicate ecosystem. Sadly, pollinators are in a scary decline! Threatened by pesticides and habitat loss, more and more species of native bees, butterflies, moths, and even wasps are declining in number. Are your purchases unwittingly making the problem worse? Check out our blog and learn about ways you can help!
A monarch butterfly feeding on milkweed
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Download “Edible Flowers for Beneficials”

  • Grow Your Own Vegetables

    Grow Your Own Vegetables
    To: me · Thu, Jul 31 at 1:47 AM

    Visit site

    Message Body​

    mail
    Here ya go, Jimi!

    Click below to download the complimentary eGuide you requested.
    3D Image of Download: Edible Plants for Beneficials
    >>> Click here for your copy of Edible Flowers for Beneficials <<<

    When it comes to protecting your garden, you want the right garden allies without losing any garden space!

    Inside the Edible Flowers for Beneficials eGuide, you’ll learn:

    🐞 8 keys to successfully encourage beneficials to your garden
    🦋 The amount of garden space that should consist of beneficial plants
    🐝 30+ edible plants to add to your garden that beneficials love

    You want your garden to be strong and resilient to get the healthiest food possible with the least amount of effort. And to do that, you need to attract beneficials to help you manage your garden.

    But why sacrifice your harvests when you can plant for both you and the beneficials?

    As you partner with nature correctly and deepen your relationship, you’ll find nature can do most of the garden work for you.

    To your thriving garden!

    🌱 Grow Your Own Vegetables Team 🌱

 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Hi Jimi,
You’ve probably heard that many skincare and beauty products contain harmful chemicals.
But did you know some are linked to hormone disruption, allergies, and even increased cancer risk?
Which ingredients are the worst offenders? And how can you spot them?
I asked my friend and renowned natural beauty expert, Annmarie Gianni, to share the top 10 ingredients we should avoid putting on our skin at all costs.
Get the full list here.
Yours for healthy, toxin-free living,
Ocean Robbins
P.S. These 10 ingredients are still found in tons of popular products. But once you know what to look for, you can add yourself to the growing wave of empowered consumers making safe, informed choices. Here’s what you need to know.

Drying garlic for long-term storage​

🧄Getting ready to harvest: We always harvest when the bottom four leaves or so are browned. At this point, we pull up a few of the plants and check the wrappers. There should be two or three layers that are still solid, and aren’t breaking down yet.

🧄Harvesting and bundling: We undercut our garlic with a tractor-mounted undercutter. It makes it easy to pull the plants up, then we bundle them in groups of twenty for drying. If you have a small garden patch, you can simply dig the plants up; just be careful not to damage the heads.

🧄Hanging to dry: Okay, so the most important factor when drying garlic is airflow. You don’t need heat; you just need airflow. We accomplish this by hanging our garlic in bunches of twenty. The downside to this method is that you need a large amount of covered space with good airflow, such as a shed, pavilion, or barn with fans.

Pro tip: We know several farmers who cut their garlic with about 6” of stalk and put them in bulb crates. Bread trays also work. These are really good options if you don’t have the space to hang-dry garlic. Half the reason we hang it is because it's a great conversation starter and customers love to come see it hanging!

🧄Finishing the process: Garlic has to dry for about 2-3 weeks. Once you start seeing dry, papery layers on the outside, you know the heads are finished drying - at this point we cut them, size them, and stick them on a pallet at room temperature.



We sell garlic in several ways through our on-farm store. First, before we even start drying the garlic we take out a small portion to sell as green bulbs. These don’t sell very well, as most people are used to dried garlic, but we do offer green garlic in small quantities.

Dried garlic heads are what we sell the most of, but we also make garlic powder and black garlic. And it’s a key ingredient in our fire ciders and garlic honey. The garlic we’re harvesting now will last until March or April…meaning we can offer garlic products all winter long.



To thriving,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Hey Jimi,

Have you thought about growing your own strawberries this year? But aren’t sure how to get started?

Here’s how…

On Tuesday I'm hosting a free webinar, breaking down our annual strawberry bed system. You'll see why it's such a big deal to plant strawberries in the fall instead of the spring, and how to make the system work for you...even if you're just planting a small patch in your backyard.

The livestream starts August 5th, at 8pm EST and everyone is welcome! The link below is public so you can share it with any friends who might be interested too.



annual-bed-strawberry-system-farm-on-central-carlisle-ohio

You'll learn about...

✅ top fall strawberry varieties

✅ how to overwinter strawberries

✅ getting an earlier spring harvest

✅ and more 🍓



Whether you’re a gardener, homesteader, or small farmer, this free class will help you successfully grow bountiful, sweet berries on your own property.

Come join and be prepared to take notes on August 5th, at 8pm EST.






We've been growing fall-planted strawberries at Farm on Central for years. It’s our not-so-secret ticket to better and sweeter berries, earlier and larger yields, and less weeds. You’ll see why in the webinar 😉



To thriving,
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Don't miss it:
Aug
5

Strawberry Webinar Invite​

Tuesday, Aug 5, 7:00 PM CT

Reply

You're invited to a free webinar on growing fall-planted strawberries, starting August 5 at 8pm EST, to ensure your plants are established for a bountiful spring harvest.

Note​

Attend the free webinar on growing fall-planted strawberries here
Created by Yahoo Mail

Was this message summary helpful?

  • Michael Kilpatrick

    Michael Kilpatrick
    To: me · Mon, Aug 4 at 5:04 PM

    Message Body​

    Hey Jimi,
    Want to grow big, beautiful, juicy strawberries in your own backyard?
    Whether you’re planting for the first year or the fifth, tomorrow night's free webinar is for you. Join me for a free class on growing fall-planted strawberries, so your plants can be well-established and ready to produce a bountiful harvest in their first spring.
    📅 Date: August 5
    ⏰ Time: 8pm EST
    📍 Where: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBrlAmYLE_k
    And if you're going, "Wait, I thought strawberries were planted in the spring???" then this webinar is definitely for you. We went fall-planted years ago, and we're never going back.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Ok here's the other half of my Pick of the day for Tuesday
Washed my taders and here's the last of them
P1500706.JPG

I have had many ask why don't you just buy them instead of all m that work?
Well humans should ONLY eat organic taders and in our stores they are almost 2,50 a pound. Right here you are lookin at about 80 to 100 pounds.
PLEASE don't eat regular store potatoes they are GMO:eek::eek::eek:
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
[ARTICLE] Over 165 Million Americans Are TOXIC Drinking Water Contaminated with PFAS
According to newly released EPA data, more than 165 million people in the U.S. are exposed to PFAS (also known as "forever chemicals") in their drinking water.
These toxic chemicals don't break down in the environment. They can build up in the human body, where they've been linked to cancer, hormone disruption, liver damage, high cholesterol, and immune system harm, even at very low levels.
PFAS have been found in tap water systems nationwide, and the problem keeps growing. The EPA's most recent tests show contamination in over 4,000 water systems nationwide.
EWG warns that the number of affected people is likely even higher, because many water systems haven't been tested yet.
The bottom line is that PFAS contamination is a national crisis. Millions of Americans may be unknowingly exposed to it every day through their water. Click here to read more.


[VIDEO] Stocking up on Homemade Herbal Medicines
Tinctures are easy to make, and they last, well, almost forever. Click here to learn how Marjory prepares her herbal medicines.


[FREE FROM OUR FRIENDS] Unbroken DocuSeries

Most people who end up in nursing homes are there because they've lost the ability to function physically and can no longer care for themselves.
This loss of independence often starts because they FAILED to check that joint pain and fatigue that come and go…
These symptoms are more than just minor inconveniences—they are the early signs of chronic inflammation.
And chronic inflammation is linked to a wide range of symptoms and diseases.
Responding swiftly to these signs can prevent the slow erosion of your health and maintain your independence.
And you can do it in the easiest and tastiest way: by indulging in some of your favorite foods – utilizing the wisdom from one of the world's most ancient healing systems!
Click here to get a Free copy of this new guide: "Top 10 Anti-Inflammatory Ingredients from the Indian Diet"
In addition, you'll also get a free ticket to the upcoming Unbroken DocuSeries.


[IN CASE YOU MISSED IT] What happened to Ice Age Farmer?
For years, many of you in The Grow Network Community have been asking, "What happened to Ice Age Farmer?" He's finally resurfaced! We're so grateful he's doing well and back at it! In this article, he documents his experience. Click here to read the full article.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
🍓Live for strawberries

  • Michael Kilpatrick
    To: me · Tue, Aug 5 at 5:04 PM

    Message Body​

    Hey Jimi,
    Quick reminder that the Fall Strawberry Webinar is starting in two hours. Free, fun, and filled with information about growing strawberries - this is just the thing to help you start that strawberry patch you've dreamed of having in your garden.


    annual-bed-strawberry-system-farm-on-central-carlisle-ohio

    You'll learn about...

    ✅ top fall strawberry varieties
    ✅ how to overwinter strawberries
    ✅ getting an earlier spring harvest
    ✅ and more 🍓

    I go live at 8pm EST. Watch the livestream here and come prepared to take notes.

    Best,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

Do you need to add micronutrients to your garden?​

 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
For the soil:

The Minerals & Microbes Soil Detox Kit breaks down synthetic residues, buffers heavy metals, and restores microbial life—turning contaminated dirt into living soil.

It's beneficial if you're concerned about PFAS, herbicide overspray, or past chemical use.

🔗 Explore the Soil Detox Kit

Together, these tools help you naturally reclaim your health and land.
 

Bliss Doubt

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Okay actually spiders are only really scary when you find them inside your home. Outdoors they're interesting. This is from my walk journal in January of 2021:

By some accounts, a walk is a time to chant your mantra, let it go in deep, to still your mind and enforce your intentions, but I find mantra repetition irritating, and it detracts from what my monkey mind likes best. Monkey likes to smile at the squirrels. If I go out late in the morning when the sun is fully up, I'll watch two of them scampering along, about 4-6 feet apart, one following the other across the library grounds. Do they look both ways before crossing the street? One day I watched two little ones travel across the grounds, keeping that 4-6 ft. social distance between themselves, one ahead of the other, but they stopped together at the street for a few seconds before crossing. Hmmm.

But today I went out at 7:30am, before the world was fully awake. I saw no little flocks of birds, no squirrels, no cats, no dogs, no humans. It may have had to do with the rain. The ground was wet, and a light mist remained in the air. I love a rainy, gray winter day. Nature spoke to monkey anyway.

I didn't walk the library grounds. At that early semi-dark hour, the densely hedged hiding places for malfeasance seem too sinister, so I set off on the straight path down my block. I collected a few acorns, pebbles and twigs from the sidewalk. Whatever is on the yard or the island next to the street, belongs where it is, but anything on the sidewalk, where someone can step on it and twist their ankle, belongs to me, to fill the trench in front of my living room window. Hands full of treasures, I continued to the estate that has my high stone wall sidewalk altar, where I stood listening for birds to chirp at me. Silence. I watched gray clouds drifting northwest.

As I set out to return home, a shower of brown oak leaves came down on the sidewalk. I looked up and said "thank you". That was when I noticed one leaf dancing in the air. It seemed to be suspended in the air, but I'm sure it was attached to a thread of spider web. I couldn't see the web. I stood watching the dancing leaf for a long time, thinking it might fall down into my hands, so I could keep it as a souvenir. It never did. It just said "contemplate me, understand me, I am speaking to you". I left, intending to look up oak leaf symbolism later.

So returning home, the next property on the way is the one with the lower stucco fence. It has a narrow trench of dirt in front of it. In that trench I noticed a spider walking right alongside me. It was a big one, maybe half as big as my hand, black, with a cross on its back, a beautiful beige gothic cross, like something you might see on a biker t-shirt. I've never before seen one like that. I watched and watched, hoping spider would start up the white wall so I could get a better look at her and the portable art on her back. She never changed course, and continued alongside me. I believe she knew she was being watched. I believe she knew she was safe.

So, the oak leaf symbolism: The symbolism of the oak leaf is inseparable from that of the oak tree.

1. Strength and victory: oak leaf often has a place on military uniforms.
2. Long life and endurance: "mighty oaks from little acorns grow".
3. Value: the hardness and long grain of oak wood make it a symbol of value. It is desirable for making things meant to last.
4: Refinement of music: There was a differentiation, in the making of the earliest musical instruments, between reed and wood, before metals were ever used.
5: The circle of life: a fallen brown leaf always represents the end of a cycle, while I'm also finding fallen acorns, those little phallic symbols of fertility and the continuation of life

Spider symbolism: I did look up the spider with the cross on its back. Under google images I didn't see any black cross spiders, only brown and gray ones. Of the ones I saw online, what I could read about them is that they are not considered very threatening, nor their bite very dangerous, but as always, if you see one, do your own research. As a child I was afraid of spiders. I think most children are. I had nightmares about them. They are scary looking, and they bite. They are used for effect in many a horror movie. A spider never survived once I laid eyes on it. To walk into a spider web is panic inducing. Even now, when I walk out in the morning, spiders will have built webs from one hedge across to the opposite one, so I'll pick up a long twig, to brandish ahead of me and clear the webs. The bite of most spiders is venomous, whether mildly so or deadly. Now I understand them better, but still not well. Spider tends to occupy an elevated place in the mythology and symbolism of older cultures.

1. Creativity. Spider creates elaborate, intricate webs. Remember "Charlotte's Web"?
2. More specifically, creativity by writing. That's for me. I write. I can't help it.
3. Patience. That speaks to me too, for patience is a virtue I lack. It takes a while to create the web to trap the food or write the message.
4. Secretiveness. This one is intuitive for me, since I know spiders like to build their homes in abandoned corners, up high inside a garage, or in a derelict box of tools on a low shelf, or in the back of your closet. They live and let live, if they can, if they are left undisturbed in their secret agent location.
5. The circle of life. Don't all creatures represent that? But spider has 8 legs, the number which, in numerology, symbolizes infinity, the infinite cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth.
6. Fate: spider's weaving symbolizes the external and internal influences on each life.
7. Anxiety: the appearance of spider in a dream may represent the dreamer's worry and fear
8. Protection: Many of the native American cultures decorated their weapons with spider, and painted her on their bodies, for success in conflicts.
9. Motherhood, the ultimate sacrifice. When my apartment was being renovated a few years ago, when furniture was moved and walls were drilled open, creatures appeared. It was all pretty harrowing, and one day I saw a big old black spider on the floor of my bedroom. I couldn't be merciful. It was too far from an exterior door to shoo it outside, and too big and scary to scrape up on a piece of paper and take outside, but I found out it was already dead anyway. Konan, my handyman, touched it with his paint scraper, and tiny baby spiders scattered everywhere. They'd been eating the mother. He told me this was normal behavior in some spider species. Gosh, I wondered, did that mother spider know her own hatchlings would attack her and consume her life force for their own?
 

2WhiteWolves

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
VU Patreon
Okay actually spiders are only really scary when you find them inside your home. Outdoors they're interesting. This is from my walk journal in January of 2021:

By some accounts, a walk is a time to chant your mantra, let it go in deep, to still your mind and enforce your intentions, but I find mantra repetition irritating, and it detracts from what my monkey mind likes best. Monkey likes to smile at the squirrels. If I go out late in the morning when the sun is fully up, I'll watch two of them scampering along, about 4-6 feet apart, one following the other across the library grounds. Do they look both ways before crossing the street? One day I watched two little ones travel across the grounds, keeping that 4-6 ft. social distance between themselves, one ahead of the other, but they stopped together at the street for a few seconds before crossing. Hmmm.

But today I went out at 7:30am, before the world was fully awake. I saw no little flocks of birds, no squirrels, no cats, no dogs, no humans. It may have had to do with the rain. The ground was wet, and a light mist remained in the air. I love a rainy, gray winter day. Nature spoke to monkey anyway.

I didn't walk the library grounds. At that early semi-dark hour, the densely hedged hiding places for malfeasance seem too sinister, so I set off on the straight path down my block. I collected a few acorns, pebbles and twigs from the sidewalk. Whatever is on the yard or the island next to the street, belongs where it is, but anything on the sidewalk, where someone can step on it and twist their ankle, belongs to me, to fill the trench in front of my living room window. Hands full of treasures, I continued to the estate that has my high stone wall sidewalk altar, where I stood listening for birds to chirp at me. Silence. I watched gray clouds drifting northwest.

As I set out to return home, a shower of brown oak leaves came down on the sidewalk. I looked up and said "thank you". That was when I noticed one leaf dancing in the air. It seemed to be suspended in the air, but I'm sure it was attached to a thread of spider web. I couldn't see the web. I stood watching the dancing leaf for a long time, thinking it might fall down into my hands, so I could keep it as a souvenir. It never did. It just said "contemplate me, understand me, I am speaking to you". I left, intending to look up oak leaf symbolism later.

So returning home, the next property on the way is the one with the lower stucco fence. It has a narrow trench of dirt in front of it. In that trench I noticed a spider walking right alongside me. It was a big one, maybe half as big as my hand, black, with a cross on its back, a beautiful beige gothic cross, like something you might see on a biker t-shirt. I've never before seen one like that. I watched and watched, hoping spider would start up the white wall so I could get a better look at her and the portable art on her back. She never changed course, and continued alongside me. I believe she knew she was being watched. I believe she knew she was safe.

So, the oak leaf symbolism: The symbolism of the oak leaf is inseparable from that of the oak tree.

1. Strength and victory: oak leaf often has a place on military uniforms.
2. Long life and endurance: "mighty oaks from little acorns grow".
3. Value: the hardness and long grain of oak wood make it a symbol of value. It is desirable for making things meant to last.
4: Refinement of music: There was a differentiation, in the making of the earliest musical instruments, between reed and wood, before metals were ever used.
5: The circle of life: a fallen brown leaf always represents the end of a cycle, while I'm also finding fallen acorns, those little phallic symbols of fertility and the continuation of life

Spider symbolism: I did look up the spider with the cross on its back. Under google images I didn't see any black cross spiders, only brown and gray ones. Of the ones I saw online, what I could read about them is that they are not considered very threatening, nor their bite very dangerous, but as always, if you see one, do your own research. As a child I was afraid of spiders. I think most children are. I had nightmares about them. They are scary looking, and they bite. They are used for effect in many a horror movie. A spider never survived once I laid eyes on it. To walk into a spider web is panic inducing. Even now, when I walk out in the morning, spiders will have built webs from one hedge across to the opposite one, so I'll pick up a long twig, to brandish ahead of me and clear the webs. The bite of most spiders is venomous, whether mildly so or deadly. Now I understand them better, but still not well. Spider tends to occupy an elevated place in the mythology and symbolism of older cultures.

1. Creativity. Spider creates elaborate, intricate webs. Remember "Charlotte's Web"?
2. More specifically, creativity by writing. That's for me. I write. I can't help it.
3. Patience. That speaks to me too, for patience is a virtue I lack. It takes a while to create the web to trap the food or write the message.
4. Secretiveness. This one is intuitive for me, since I know spiders like to build their homes in abandoned corners, up high inside a garage, or in a derelict box of tools on a low shelf, or in the back of your closet. They live and let live, if they can, if they are left undisturbed in their secret agent location.
5. The circle of life. Don't all creatures represent that? But spider has 8 legs, the number which, in numerology, symbolizes infinity, the infinite cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth.
6. Fate: spider's weaving symbolizes the external and internal influences on each life.
7. Anxiety: the appearance of spider in a dream may represent the dreamer's worry and fear
8. Protection: Many of the native American cultures decorated their weapons with spider, and painted her on their bodies, for success in conflicts.
9. Motherhood, the ultimate sacrifice. When my apartment was being renovated a few years ago, when furniture was moved and walls were drilled open, creatures appeared. It was all pretty harrowing, and one day I saw a big old black spider on the floor of my bedroom. I couldn't be merciful. It was too far from an exterior door to shoo it outside, and too big and scary to scrape up on a piece of paper and take outside, but I found out it was already dead anyway. Konan, my handyman, touched it with his paint scraper, and tiny baby spiders scattered everywhere. They'd been eating the mother. He told me this was normal behavior in some spider species. Gosh, I wondered, did that mother spider know her own hatchlings would attack her and consume her life force for their own?
This pic was from 2020 and it hasn't cast its web since then. It was right at the back porch screen door.
1000015926.jpg
On the outdoor camera video recorder, every night I watch at least one spider making its web, it looks like they are flying through the air. I love watching them create their masterpieces.

But, I also worry about the master flyers of the sky...the hummingbirds getting caught in one of their masterpieces.
 
Last edited:

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
As food prices continue to climb, preserving your garden harvest and farmer’s market haul might be on your mind this season. But what’s the best way to save and store all those veggies? And how much time and equipment is it going to take??
Too much of a good thing is a great problem to have… as long as you’re ready with a plan.
You have to take action fast or that precious harvest goes to waste. It would be so much better as pasta sauce later in the year. 😉
That’s why we're inviting you to a Masterclass with Stacey Murphy called 3 Strategies to Simplify Preserving and Storing the Harvest: Enjoy Fresh, Organic Vegetables & Herbs All Year Long.
--->>
Access the Masterclass now
You’ll discover how to think like a restaurant owner so that you can transform fresh food into a stocked kitchen without a lot of hard work.
This is not just about a bunch of canned tomatoes here. We’re talking ready-made meals with that summery burst of flavor and nutrition all year long.
In this Masterclass, you’ll learn the strategy Stacey’s dad taught her that made her a “flavor ninja.” You can transform basic garden ingredients into wildly delicious meals in minutes, too!
You’ll hear about Stacey’s complete Harvest into Meals preservation system including…
  • Garden fresh recipes
  • Meal planning
  • Food storage
  • Canning
  • Fermenting
  • Drying
  • Dehydrating
  • Pickling
When you have a preservation system, you can enjoy delicious, garden fresh meals even when it’s cold outside.
Preserving the harvest means you don't have to say goodbye to your favorites simply because the seasons change.
And it really can be simpler than you think.
--->>Access the Masterclass now: 3 Strategies to Simplify Preserving and Storing the Harvest: Enjoy Fresh, Organic Vegetables & Herbs All Year Long
So thankful that you're making an investment in your health, your life and yourself.
Because health means everything,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
I had some maters that were gettin over ripe so I decided to turn a couple bowls of maters into this much catsup
P1500722.JPG

because of my cancer I can't eat regular catsup and it's full of sugar most use high glucose corn syrup which is poison to a cancer patient.
Mine has a total of 1 and a half tablespoons of maple syrup instead of a cup of white granulated sugar
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
My harvest today
P1500725.JPG
Several kinds of maters, I love the little yellow 2 bite maters, they have a sweet fruity taste
% cukes, beetles are startin in on them
A zucchini that hide from me the other day now it's destine to be zucchini bread
A nice red pepper and the green ones were too heavy for the branch and broke the branch off

P1500727.JPG

And here we have cherry maters hot banana peppers purple cayenne, and the green cayenne peppers are from one of my red cayenne pepper plants, something broke the branch there too. As the year goes pepper plants seem to get more brittle and easy to snap a branch
 

Jimi

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Member For 5 Years
[ARTICLE] How to Plan Your Fall Vegetable Garden
Fall gardening isn't just for root crops—it's one of the best seasons for fresh greens, brassicas, and hardy herbs. This guide will help you choose the right crops, count backward from your first frost date, and make the most of cooler weather to extend your harvest well into winter.
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