Pawpaw - fairchild/zimmerman |
What a looker.... lol
Ahh well, theyre alive.
We just received our order of 5 pawpaws, 1 Cornelian cherry and 1 Sassafras tree. All seem to be alive but time will tell. While we are in the agriculture business to sell food, we are also collectors of rare species, efficiency and economics be damned.
Variety is the spice of life so they say, and I tend to agree withem.
The sassafras tree is something Ive always thought about since I started gardening. When you enjoy cooking and growing your own food, you inevitably start wandering down the path of potential, and for some reason its always those plants with such a troubled history I crave to own so badly. Im not sure if its the allure or just our nightmarish history of how we treat plants (/things) plaguing me, putting my bulldog determination into high gear, trying to order/acquire every species possible before its gone or screwed up with genetic modification.
The Pawpaws we managed to get our hands on were as follows.
1. P.A Golden
2. Fairchild-Zimmermin
3. O Taytoo
4. Davis
5. Green river
Pawpaw Canada |
Rare plants Ontario |
Wild gooseberry |
I thought I would take a trip around the property and see what I can find since spring is in the air and its never to early for a curious mind. Ive already come across some fossils of bone turning into quartz, dragon fly fossils, ancient crinoid blooms stuck in carboniferous limestone, a massive boulder with a rainbow-like quartz vein some 5 inches in width and 8 feet in length. There are heirloom apples on the hill and beach plums separating the pastures. Chaga lay on the fallen birch tree in the back, and heritage raspberry bushes fill every nook and cranny. An absolute smorgasbord of taste, history and experience.
Red gooseberry - poormans |
(poormans gooseberry potted last year)
You can see on the lower part of the plant where the old growth has weathered and turned a dark brown/maroon. This area will be filled with thorns.( unless you have a newer variety that is semi-thorn less e.g "captivator")
Red gooseberry Ontario Canada |
? This is a red gooseberry ( poor mans ) that I potted up last year.?
Wild gooseberry leaves |
Wild raspberry canes |
Wild gooseberry stalk - old growth |
Raspberry cane ( heritage ) |
Gooseberry plant identification |
Wild gooseberry bush hidden. By the time the fruit is ready no-one would know where this bush is. Spring is probably the best time to go hunting for things like this
Gooseberry patch hidden |
Gooseberry patch
Gooseberry wild variety |
I shot this with my iPhone as I didnt have my camera at the time, but I just wanted to show how mixed in these gooseberries actually are. This is right in the lawn, If I didnt know any better I would just be running this thing over with the mower or letting the goats nibble at it.
( its the blurry plant in the middle)
Old 1850s double barn |
Spring flowers |
Purple spring flowers |
SPRING!
mini Rockhound dig Ontario |
Catnip |
strangely, some people find it smells funny, I kinda like it. Ive yet to make a tea from it, curious, as Ive heard that certain concentrations, in certain people, will actually give experiences similar to marijuana. I have not had the time to experiment with this but since its just outback it seems a good a time as any.
Here goes......
BOTTOMS UP!
catmint |
gooseberries hidden |