Latest Tweets:

savvyliving:

DIY Rain Barrel

savvyliving:

DIY Rain Barrel

(via savvyliving)

*2
Succulents are blooming!

Succulents are blooming!

grokgrokgrok:

DIY Rain Harevesting

grokgrokgrok:

DIY Rain Harevesting

*3
tryandstopmetyler:

Let my tree grow!


Actually this IS one of ours. 

#h0m3gr0wn

tryandstopmetyler:

Let my tree grow!


Actually this IS one of ours.

#h0m3gr0wn

(Source: tryandstopmetyler)

*76

(Source: helenofdestroy)

*26
chemicalfreelife:

GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD:  

Who are the Big Food / Big Ag Corporations that are Fighting the GMO-Labeling Proposition 37?

.
Against Honest Labeling / “No” on Prop 37 Financiers:

MONSANTO COMPANY $7,100,500.00. Monsanto was and still is a pesticide company, which also sells BT crop seeds; foods you end up eating that contain pesticides and man-made genetics. So, it is not farmers or doctors telling you the GMO food labels are unfair and unreasonable, the main financier of the ads is a pesticide-Franken foods company.
Monsanto earns billions of dollars from Asgrow, Genuity, Ready 2 Yield, Roundup Ready and BT crop seeds. France and Poland outlawed these seeds, Poland recently and France years ago. French people have far less diabetes and obesity, largely because they do not eat frankenfoods.
E.I. DUPONT DE NEMOURS & CO. $4,900,000.00  is also a pesticide company who genetically alters foods. Like Monsanto, DuPont does there own “safety testing’ and the American public just takes their word for it that the bacteria and algae genes spliced into food genes are “safe’. These so-called biotech companies http://tinyurl.com/clrr8va have checkered pasts.
BASF PLANT SCIENCE $2,000,000.00  BASF’s pesticide division supplies agricultural products and chemicals. The company produces fungicides, herbicides and insecticides including F500 (pyraclostrobin), epoxiconazole, pendimethalin, boscalid, fipronil, and seed treatment products.   The company also researches Nutrigenomics. BASF is neither poor California family farmer nor a woman pediatric doctor; this is a poison company that does not want you to know what you are eating.
BAYER CROPSCIENCE $2,000,000.00  Bayer’s Gaucho insecticide is killing the world’s bees, which could cause about 1/3 of the Earth’s people to starve. Profits before bees or humans.
DOW AGROSCIENCES LLC $2,000,000.00  Dow is another pesticide company that makes genetically modified frankenfoods.
PEPSICO, INC. $1,716,300.00  Quaker Oats states that it is an “all-natural” product. But Quaker Oats (a unit of PepsiCo) manages a processing plant that emits roughly 19,000 pounds of sulfuryl fluoride yearly. Sulfuryl fluoride is a toxic greenhouse gas used to treat crops like oats in storage.
GMO Sodas (GMO corn syrup)
Pepsi
Slice
Wild Cherry Pepsi
Mug Root Beer
Mountain Dew
 Learn more: http://tinyurl.com/9fs5bd4
NESTLE USA, INC. $1,169,400.00  http://tinyurl.com/9y2hj7u
COCA-COLA NORTH AMERICA $1,164,400.00
GMO Sodas
Every one of these soft drinks includes high fructose corn syrup — one of the most common GMO ingredients:
Coca Cola Company
Coca Cola
Sprite
Cherry Coke
Barq’s Root Beer
Minute Maid Orange
Minute Maid Grape
Surge
Ultra
CONAGRA FOODS $1,076,700.00  ConAgra Sued Over GMO ‘100% Natural’ Cooking Oils http://tinyurl.com/9h45a62
SYNGENTA CORPORATION $1,000,000.00  Syngenta is a global agribusiness, agrochemical and biotechnology corporation based in Basel, Switzerland. It has substantial interests in the seed industry and genetically modified (GMO) crops. The company produces insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, field crop seeds (soybeans), vegetable seeds (corn, beans, tomatoes), and flowers.
GENERAL MILLS, INC. $908,200.00  common foods like breakfast cereals Kix, Cheerios, Corn Flakes, etc. are chock full of GMO corn meal. Sweetened cereals are sweetened with GMO corn syrup. Any of the grains in the cereals is usually GMO.
DEL MONTE FOODS COMPANY $674,100.00  Read more here http://tinyurl.com/cnnxqsp
KELLOGG COMPANY $632,500.00  Another GMO food pushing company that tries to hide behind the word natural on their labels. http://www.organicconsumers.org/kelloggs.cfm
KRAFT FOODS GLOBAL, INC. $551,148.25 
H.J. HEINZ COMPANY $500,000.00  GMO Ketchup Backlash Goes Viral After Heinz Joins Fight Against Proposition 37 http://tinyurl.com/8b83jdn
Cargill  is the largest supplier of grains in the world. It is the world’s second largest supplier of animal feed and the second largest supplier for food and industrial starches. The company is also the second largest meat packer in the U.S., after Tyson Foods. Excel was bought by Cargill in 1979 and has divisions in Australia and Canada. The company also owns Caprock, a large beef feed lot operation. Cargill is the second largest turkey processor in the U.S. It also owns Sunny Fresh egg products and Empack Foods, a meat processing company. Cargill owns Wisepack Transport, a refrigerated trucking company which transports Empack Foods and Wisconsin products across the U.S.
Cargills’ interest in this has much to do with feeding their farm animals GMO’s; it is possible that farm animals fed vast quantities of GMO’s have displayed bizarre, unexpected results.
Others Involved:
Sunny Delight, Kellogg’s, Bumble Bee Foods, Bimbo Bakeries, Campbell Soup, Land O’Lakes, Hormel Foods, Dole Packaged Foods, Del Monte Foods and Ocean Spray Cranberries, to name a few, have all joined the anti-labeling coalition to defeat Prop. 37, as well as little-known companies like Knouse Foods, who makes applesauce and apple juice under the Musselman’s, Lucky Leaf, Apple Time, Lincoln and Speas Farm brand names.
As many companies have done, PepsiCo not only refuses to reveal its GMO ingredients, but in packaging products from its five divisions, Pepsi-Cola, Frito-Lay, Gatorade, Tropicana, and Quaker , it uses purposely misleading language such as “natural” or “all natural” to entice the health-conscious buyer. Read more here http://tinyurl.com/cnnxqsp
More on who is bankrolling the No on Prop 37 TV ads:  http://tinyurl.com/9n6rwzz
Source: Yes On Prop 37 Yes On California GMO Food Labeling
_______

Foods and drinks that may contain GMOs include:
-Commercially-processed (non-organic) food and drinks that contain:


Corn oil
Corn syrup
Soybean oil
Beet sugar
Cottonseed oil
Canola oil; 
-Some non-organic produce. Note: Non-GMO packaged, frozen, or canned fruits/vegetables may contain GMO additives; 
-Meat and dairy (source: animal feed);  
-Processed foods, drinks and snack containing as “High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), soy lecthin, and soy protein”.
Solution: Non-GMO Shopping Guide

__________

Vote YES! On Prop 37!  Learn why here:
 Yes on Prop 37 
www.carighttoknow.org/

.

chemicalfreelife:

GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD: 

Who are the Big Food / Big Ag Corporations that are Fighting the GMO-Labeling Proposition 37?

.

Against Honest Labeling / “No” on Prop 37 Financiers:


MONSANTO COMPANY $7,100,500.00. Monsanto was and still is a pesticide company, which also sells BT crop seeds; foods you end up eating that contain pesticides and man-made genetics. So, it is not farmers or doctors telling you the GMO food labels are unfair and unreasonable, the main financier of the ads is a pesticide-Franken foods company.

Monsanto earns billions of dollars from Asgrow, Genuity, Ready 2 Yield, Roundup Ready and BT crop seeds. France and Poland outlawed these seeds, Poland recently and France years ago. French people have far less diabetes and obesity, largely because they do not eat frankenfoods.

E.I. DUPONT DE NEMOURS & CO. $4,900,000.00  is also a pesticide company who genetically alters foods. Like Monsanto, DuPont does there own “safety testing’ and the American public just takes their word for it that the bacteria and algae genes spliced into food genes are “safe’. These so-called biotech companies http://tinyurl.com/clrr8va have checkered pasts.

BASF PLANT SCIENCE $2,000,000.00  BASF’s pesticide division supplies agricultural products and chemicals. The company produces fungicides, herbicides and insecticides including F500 (pyraclostrobin), epoxiconazole, pendimethalin, boscalid, fipronil, and seed treatment products.   The company also researches Nutrigenomics. BASF is neither poor California family farmer nor a woman pediatric doctor; this is a poison company that does not want you to know what you are eating.

BAYER CROPSCIENCE $2,000,000.00  Bayer’s Gaucho insecticide is killing the world’s bees, which could cause about 1/3 of the Earth’s people to starve. Profits before bees or humans.

DOW AGROSCIENCES LLC $2,000,000.00  Dow is another pesticide company that makes genetically modified frankenfoods.

PEPSICO, INC. $1,716,300.00  Quaker Oats states that it is an “all-natural” product. But Quaker Oats (a unit of PepsiCo) manages a processing plant that emits roughly 19,000 pounds of sulfuryl fluoride yearly. Sulfuryl fluoride is a toxic greenhouse gas used to treat crops like oats in storage.

GMO Sodas (GMO corn syrup)

Pepsi

Slice

Wild Cherry Pepsi

Mug Root Beer

Mountain Dew


Learn more: http://tinyurl.com/9fs5bd4

NESTLE USA, INC. $1,169,400.00  http://tinyurl.com/9y2hj7u

COCA-COLA NORTH AMERICA $1,164,400.00

GMO Sodas

Every one of these soft drinks includes high fructose corn syrup — one of the most common GMO ingredients:

Coca Cola Company

Coca Cola

Sprite

Cherry Coke

Barq’s Root Beer

Minute Maid Orange

Minute Maid Grape

Surge

Ultra

CONAGRA FOODS $1,076,700.00  ConAgra Sued Over GMO ‘100% Natural’ Cooking Oils http://tinyurl.com/9h45a62

SYNGENTA CORPORATION $1,000,000.00  Syngenta is a global agribusiness, agrochemical and biotechnology corporation based in Basel, Switzerland. It has substantial interests in the seed industry and genetically modified (GMO) crops. The company produces insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, field crop seeds (soybeans), vegetable seeds (corn, beans, tomatoes), and flowers.

GENERAL MILLS, INC. $908,200.00  common foods like breakfast cereals Kix, Cheerios, Corn Flakes, etc. are chock full of GMO corn meal. Sweetened cereals are sweetened with GMO corn syrup. Any of the grains in the cereals is usually GMO.

DEL MONTE FOODS COMPANY $674,100.00  Read more here http://tinyurl.com/cnnxqsp

KELLOGG COMPANY $632,500.00  Another GMO food pushing company that tries to hide behind the word natural on their labels. http://www.organicconsumers.org/kelloggs.cfm

KRAFT FOODS GLOBAL, INC. $551,148.25 

H.J. HEINZ COMPANY $500,000.00  GMO Ketchup Backlash Goes Viral After Heinz Joins Fight Against Proposition 37 http://tinyurl.com/8b83jdn

Cargill is the largest supplier of grains in the world. It is the world’s second largest supplier of animal feed and the second largest supplier for food and industrial starches. The company is also the second largest meat packer in the U.S., after Tyson Foods. Excel was bought by Cargill in 1979 and has divisions in Australia and Canada. The company also owns Caprock, a large beef feed lot operation. Cargill is the second largest turkey processor in the U.S. It also owns Sunny Fresh egg products and Empack Foods, a meat processing company. Cargill owns Wisepack Transport, a refrigerated trucking company which transports Empack Foods and Wisconsin products across the U.S.

Cargills’ interest in this has much to do with feeding their farm animals GMO’s; it is possible that farm animals fed vast quantities of GMO’s have displayed bizarre, unexpected results.

Others Involved:

Sunny Delight, Kellogg’s, Bumble Bee Foods, Bimbo Bakeries, Campbell Soup, Land O’Lakes, Hormel Foods, Dole Packaged Foods, Del Monte Foods and Ocean Spray Cranberries, to name a few, have all joined the anti-labeling coalition to defeat Prop. 37, as well as little-known companies like Knouse Foods, who makes applesauce and apple juice under the Musselman’s, Lucky Leaf, Apple Time, Lincoln and Speas Farm brand names.

As many companies have done, PepsiCo not only refuses to reveal its GMO ingredients, but in packaging products from its five divisions, Pepsi-Cola, Frito-Lay, Gatorade, Tropicana, and Quaker , it uses purposely misleading language such as “natural” or “all natural” to entice the health-conscious buyer. Read more here http://tinyurl.com/cnnxqsp

More on who is bankrolling the No on Prop 37 TV ads: http://tinyurl.com/9n6rwzz

Source: Yes On Prop 37 Yes On California GMO Food Labeling

_______

Foods and drinks that may contain GMOs include:

-Commercially-processed (non-organic) food and drinks that contain:

Corn oil

Corn syrup

Soybean oil

Beet sugar

Cottonseed oil

Canola oil;

-Some non-organic produce. Note: Non-GMO packaged, frozen, or canned fruits/vegetables may contain GMO additives;

-Meat and dairy (source: animal feed); 

-Processed foods, drinks and snack containing as “High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), soy lecthin, and soy protein”.

Solution: Non-GMO Shopping Guide

__________

Vote YES! On Prop 37!  Learn why here:

.

Blossom from our peanut patch

Blossom from our peanut patch

Thank you Neville

Thank you Neville

*80
wallacegardens:

A tree and shrub guide / infographic: evergreens, deciduous and tropicals. Such a cool tool! Created by a member of RevitCity.

wallacegardens:

A tree and shrub guide / infographic: evergreens, deciduous and tropicals. Such a cool tool! Created by a member of RevitCity.

(via theherbarium)

nybg:

viridiphyta:

These flowers in the Asclepiadaceae (milkweed) family have evolved to look, feel, and smell exactly like a decomposing mammal. Their red/yellow colors mimic rotting and decomposing flesh and fat, they have a soft and pulpy surface and absolutely reek. Some of them even fool flies and make them lay their eggs on their flowers so pollination can occur!

Source

Fun fact: We actually had a few carrion flowers make an appearance during the first week of the Monet’s Garden display in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. They were a bit of an Easter egg, as they were hidden away behind some of the more colorful spring blooms, but even if you didn’t see them, you caught a pungent whiff within four or five feet.

Our horticulturists felt they were the kind of florescence Monet’s daring side would have appreciated. I tend to agree. —MN

Edit: As I know I’ll get comments about this, let me confirm for the sake of completeness that Asclepiadaceae is now, to the best of my knowledge, considered a subset under the Apocynaceae family. Lo, but botany is a complicated business at times.

(via theherbarium)

communitymarkets:

How to Store Vegetables Without Plastic


So you’ve got all these great fruits and vegetables and now we’re going to help you keep them at their freshest with these tips. These tips are from the Berkley Farmer’s Market which is a Zero Waste market! Here is a printable PDF of their original tip sheet. In the works here at Washington’s Green Grocer is a switch from plastic bags (although we use as few as we can get away with, while still keeping your produce from getting battered on it’s way to you) to only recyclable paper and reuseable cloth bags!  
How to Store Vegetables without Plastic
Artichokes‐ place in an airtight container sealed, with light moisture.
Asparagus‐ place them loosely in a glass or bowl upright with water at room temperature. (Will keep for a week outside the fridge)
Avocados‐ place in a paper bag at room temp. To speed up their ripening‐ place an apple in the bag with them.
Arugula‐ arugula, like lettuce, should not stay wet! Dunk in cold water and spin or lay flat to dry. Place dry arugula in an open container, wrapped with a dry towel to absorb any extra moisture.
Basil‐ is difficult to store well. Basil does not like the cold, or to be wet for that matter. The best method here is an airtight container/jar loosely packed with a small damp piece of paper inside‐left out on a cool counter.
Beans, shelling‐ open container in the fridge, eat ASAP. Some recommend freezing them if not going to eat right away
Beets‐ cut the tops off to keep beets firm, (be sure to keep the greens!)by leaving any top on root vegetables draws moisture from the root, making them loose flavor and firmness. Beets should be washed and kept in and open container with a wet towel on top.
Beet greens‐ place in an airtight container with a little moisture.
Broccoli‐ place in an open container in the fridge or wrap in a damp towel before placing in the fridge.
Broccoli Rabe‐ left in an open container in the crisper, but best used as soon as possible.
Brussels Sprouts‐ If bought on the stalk leave them on that stalk. Put the stalk in the fridge or leave it on a cold place. If they’re bought loose store them in an open container with a damp towel on top.
Cabbage‐ left out on a cool counter is fine up to a week, in the crisper otherwise. Peel off outer leaves if they start to wilt. Cabbage might begin to loose its moisture after a week , so, best used as soon as possible.
Carrots‐ cut the tops off to keep them fresh longer. Place them in closed container with plenty of moisture, either wrapped in a damp towel or dunk them in cold water every couple of days if they’re stored that long.
Cauliflower‐ will last a while in a closed container in the fridge, but they say cauliflower has the best flavor the day it’s bought.
Celery‐ does best when simply places in a cup or bowl of shallow water on the counter.
Celery root/Celeriac‐ wrap the root in a damp towel and place in the crisper.
Corn‐ leave unhusked in an open container if you must, but corn really is best eaten sooner then later for maximum flavor.
Cucumber‐ wrapped in a moist towel in the fridge. If you’re planning on eating them within a day or two after buying them they should be fine left out in a cool room.
Eggplant‐ does fine left out in a cool room. Don’t wash it, eggplant doesn’t like any extra moisture around its leaves. For longer storage‐ place loose, in the crisper.
Fava beans‐ place in an air tight container.
Fennel‐ if used within a couple days after it’s bought fennel can be left out on the counter, upright in a cup or bowl of water (like celery). If wanting to keep longer than a few days place in the fridge in a closed container with a little water.
Garlic‐ store in a cool, dark, place.
Green garlic‐an airtight container in the fridge or left out for a day or two is fine, best before dried out.
Greens‐ remove any bands, twist ties, etc. most greens must be kept in an air‐tight container with a damp cloth‐ to keep them from drying out. Kale, collards, and chard even do well in a cup of water on the counter or fridge.
Green beans‐ they like humidity, but not wetness. A damp cloth draped over an open or loosely closed container.
Green Tomatoes‐ store in a cool room away from the sun to keep them green and use quickly or they will begin to color.
Herbs- a closed container in the fridge to kept up to a week. Any longer might encourage mold.
Lettuce‐ keep damp in an airtight container in the fridge.
Leeks‐leave in an open container in the crisper wrapped in a damp cloth or in a shallow cup of water on the counter (just so the very bottom of the stem has water).
Okra‐ doesn’t like humidity. So a dry towel in an airtight container. Doesn’t store that well, best eaten quickly after purchase
Onion‐ store in a cool, dark and dry, place‐ good air circulation is best, so don’t stack them.
Parsnips‐an open container in the crisper, or, like a carrot, wrapped in a damp cloth in the fridge.
Potatoes‐ (like garlic and onions) store in cool, dark and dry place, such as, a box in a dark corner of the pantry; a paper bag also works well.
Radicchio‐ place in the fridge in an open container with a damp cloth on top.
Radishes‐ remove the greens (store separately) so they don’t draw out excess moisture from the roots and place them in a open container in the fridge with a wet towel placed on top.
Rhubarb‐wrap in a damp towel and place in an open container in the refrigerator.
Rutabagas‐ in an ideal situation a cool, dark, humid root cellar or a closed container in the crisper to keep their moisture in.
Snap peas‐ refrigerate in an open container
Spinach‐ store loose in an open container in the crisper, cool as soon as possible. Spinach loves to stay cold.
Spring onions‐ Remove any band or tie and place in the crisper.
Summer Squash‐ does fine for a few days if left out on a cool counter, even after cut.
Sweet peppers‐ Only wash them right before you plan on eating them as wetness decreases storage time. Store in a cool room to use in a couple a days, place in the crisper if longer storage needed.
Sweet Potatoes‐ Store in a cool, dark, well‐ventilated place. Never refrigerate‐‐sweet potatoes don’t like the cold.
Tomatoes‐ Never refrigerate. Depending on ripeness, tomatoes can stay for up to two weeks on the counter. To hasten ripeness place in a paper bag with an apple.
Turnips‐ remove the greens (store separately) same as radishes and beets, store them in an open container with a moist cloth.
Winter squash‐store in a cool, dark, well ventilated place. Many growers say winter squashes get sweeter if they’re stored for a week or so before eaten.
Zucchini‐ does fine for a few days if left out on a cool counter, even after cut. Wrap in a cloth and refrigerate for longer storage.

communitymarkets:

How to Store Vegetables Without Plastic

So you’ve got all these great fruits and vegetables and now we’re going to help you keep them at their freshest with these tips. These tips are from the Berkley Farmer’s Market which is a Zero Waste market! Here is a printable PDF of their original tip sheet. In the works here at Washington’s Green Grocer is a switch from plastic bags (although we use as few as we can get away with, while still keeping your produce from getting battered on it’s way to you) to only recyclable paper and reuseable cloth bags!  

How to Store Vegetables without Plastic

Artichokes‐ place in an airtight container sealed, with light moisture.

Asparagus‐ place them loosely in a glass or bowl upright with water at room temperature. (Will keep for a week outside the fridge)

Avocados‐ place in a paper bag at room temp. To speed up their ripening‐ place an apple in the bag with them.

Arugula‐ arugula, like lettuce, should not stay wet! Dunk in cold water and spin or lay flat to dry. Place dry arugula in an open container, wrapped with a dry towel to absorb any extra moisture.

Basil‐ is difficult to store well. Basil does not like the cold, or to be wet for that matter. The best method here is an airtight container/jar loosely packed with a small damp piece of paper inside‐left out on a cool counter.

Beans, shelling‐ open container in the fridge, eat ASAP. Some recommend freezing them if not going to eat right away

Beets‐ cut the tops off to keep beets firm, (be sure to keep the greens!)by leaving any top on root vegetables draws moisture from the root, making them loose flavor and firmness. Beets should be washed and kept in and open container with a wet towel on top.

Beet greens‐ place in an airtight container with a little moisture.

Broccoli‐ place in an open container in the fridge or wrap in a damp towel before placing in the fridge.

Broccoli Rabe‐ left in an open container in the crisper, but best used as soon as possible.

Brussels Sprouts‐ If bought on the stalk leave them on that stalk. Put the stalk in the fridge or leave it on a cold place. If they’re bought loose store them in an open container with a damp towel on top.

Cabbage‐ left out on a cool counter is fine up to a week, in the crisper otherwise. Peel off outer leaves if they start to wilt. Cabbage might begin to loose its moisture after a week , so, best used as soon as possible.

Carrots‐ cut the tops off to keep them fresh longer. Place them in closed container with plenty of moisture, either wrapped in a damp towel or dunk them in cold water every couple of days if they’re stored that long.

Cauliflower‐ will last a while in a closed container in the fridge, but they say cauliflower has the best flavor the day it’s bought.

Celery‐ does best when simply places in a cup or bowl of shallow water on the counter.

Celery root/Celeriac‐ wrap the root in a damp towel and place in the crisper.

Corn‐ leave unhusked in an open container if you must, but corn really is best eaten sooner then later for maximum flavor.

Cucumber‐ wrapped in a moist towel in the fridge. If you’re planning on eating them within a day or two after buying them they should be fine left out in a cool room.

Eggplant‐ does fine left out in a cool room. Don’t wash it, eggplant doesn’t like any extra moisture around its leaves. For longer storage‐ place loose, in the crisper.

Fava beans‐ place in an air tight container.

Fennel‐ if used within a couple days after it’s bought fennel can be left out on the counter, upright in a cup or bowl of water (like celery). If wanting to keep longer than a few days place in the fridge in a closed container with a little water.

Garlic‐ store in a cool, dark, place.

Green garlic‐an airtight container in the fridge or left out for a day or two is fine, best before dried out.

Greens‐ remove any bands, twist ties, etc. most greens must be kept in an air‐tight container with a damp cloth‐ to keep them from drying out. Kale, collards, and chard even do well in a cup of water on the counter or fridge.

Green beans‐ they like humidity, but not wetness. A damp cloth draped over an open or loosely closed container.

Green Tomatoes‐ store in a cool room away from the sun to keep them green and use quickly or they will begin to color.

Herbs- a closed container in the fridge to kept up to a week. Any longer might encourage mold.

Lettuce‐ keep damp in an airtight container in the fridge.

Leeks‐leave in an open container in the crisper wrapped in a damp cloth or in a shallow cup of water on the counter (just so the very bottom of the stem has water).

Okra‐ doesn’t like humidity. So a dry towel in an airtight container. Doesn’t store that well, best eaten quickly after purchase

Onion‐ store in a cool, dark and dry, place‐ good air circulation is best, so don’t stack them.

Parsnips‐an open container in the crisper, or, like a carrot, wrapped in a damp cloth in the fridge.

Potatoes‐ (like garlic and onions) store in cool, dark and dry place, such as, a box in a dark corner of the pantry; a paper bag also works well.

Radicchio‐ place in the fridge in an open container with a damp cloth on top.

Radishes‐ remove the greens (store separately) so they don’t draw out excess moisture from the roots and place them in a open container in the fridge with a wet towel placed on top.

Rhubarb‐wrap in a damp towel and place in an open container in the refrigerator.

Rutabagas‐ in an ideal situation a cool, dark, humid root cellar or a closed container in the crisper to keep their moisture in.

Snap peas‐ refrigerate in an open container

Spinach‐ store loose in an open container in the crisper, cool as soon as possible. Spinach loves to stay cold.

Spring onions‐ Remove any band or tie and place in the crisper.

Summer Squash‐ does fine for a few days if left out on a cool counter, even after cut.

Sweet peppers‐ Only wash them right before you plan on eating them as wetness decreases storage time. Store in a cool room to use in a couple a days, place in the crisper if longer storage needed.

Sweet Potatoes‐ Store in a cool, dark, well‐ventilated place. Never refrigerate‐‐sweet potatoes don’t like the cold.

Tomatoes‐ Never refrigerate. Depending on ripeness, tomatoes can stay for up to two weeks on the counter. To hasten ripeness place in a paper bag with an apple.

Turnips‐ remove the greens (store separately) same as radishes and beets, store them in an open container with a moist cloth.

Winter squash‐store in a cool, dark, well ventilated place. Many growers say winter squashes get sweeter if they’re stored for a week or so before eaten.

Zucchini‐ does fine for a few days if left out on a cool counter, even after cut. Wrap in a cloth and refrigerate for longer storage.

*1
fresh green peanuts from the garden!!!

fresh green peanuts from the garden!!!

(via artpixie)

*1
dancing bird house gourds
(those are hops growing up the sides)

dancing bird house gourds

(those are hops growing up the sides)