RSKY
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2003
- Messages
- 2,475
- Tractor
- Kioti CK20S
Here is a link to a site that has instructions for canning or freezing just about anything.
Where to Find Pick-Your-Own Fruit and Vegetable Farms / Orchards for Local, Fresh Fruit, Vegetables and Pumpkins, Along With Canning, Freezing & Preserving Instructions!
They also have instructions on picking, for instance how to tell if the veggie is ready to be picked.
I would like to make a suggestion. Start small and work your way up to a larger garden. I have put out quite a bit one year before I retired, then had to work overtime because somebody got hurt at work. Lost most of that years production. Find out what your family would like to have a supply of and start with that. For instance a few rows of corn and a few rows of green beans or lima beans. Pumpkins take a lot of area for what I consider not much to eat. If you are going to sell them it is a different situation.
A couple at our church farm quite a bit and every year they plant several rows of Bodacious Sweet Corn at the edge of a couple fields. It is planted so that every week there is some coming in. They get up early on each Sunday morning and fill up the bed of their pickup and bring it to church. When the service is over everybody makes a dash for the door and that truck. They have old plastic grocery bags in a box and you get all the corn on the cob you need for that days meal. What is left over they take to some of the older people in the neighborhood.
Had a cousin who died this year do something similar for as long as he had been retired. His garden was three times as big as his family needed. He would pick green beans or squash or lima beans or corn and take them around to the older ladies, widows, and couples in his community. At his funereal there was a huge crowd. Many older people with walkers and canes talking about how he always brought them garden fresh vegetables even when he was so sick he could barely walk himself.
It would be nice to be remembered like that.
RSKY
Where to Find Pick-Your-Own Fruit and Vegetable Farms / Orchards for Local, Fresh Fruit, Vegetables and Pumpkins, Along With Canning, Freezing & Preserving Instructions!
They also have instructions on picking, for instance how to tell if the veggie is ready to be picked.
I would like to make a suggestion. Start small and work your way up to a larger garden. I have put out quite a bit one year before I retired, then had to work overtime because somebody got hurt at work. Lost most of that years production. Find out what your family would like to have a supply of and start with that. For instance a few rows of corn and a few rows of green beans or lima beans. Pumpkins take a lot of area for what I consider not much to eat. If you are going to sell them it is a different situation.
A couple at our church farm quite a bit and every year they plant several rows of Bodacious Sweet Corn at the edge of a couple fields. It is planted so that every week there is some coming in. They get up early on each Sunday morning and fill up the bed of their pickup and bring it to church. When the service is over everybody makes a dash for the door and that truck. They have old plastic grocery bags in a box and you get all the corn on the cob you need for that days meal. What is left over they take to some of the older people in the neighborhood.
Had a cousin who died this year do something similar for as long as he had been retired. His garden was three times as big as his family needed. He would pick green beans or squash or lima beans or corn and take them around to the older ladies, widows, and couples in his community. At his funereal there was a huge crowd. Many older people with walkers and canes talking about how he always brought them garden fresh vegetables even when he was so sick he could barely walk himself.
It would be nice to be remembered like that.
RSKY