FAMILY MATTERS
/0 Comments/in Gardening, Pests, Planning/by Lee ReichThe following is adapted from my book The Ever Curious Gardener: Using a Little Natural Science for a Much Better Garden:
No Idle Gossip
You often hear talk about various plants being related to each other. There’s the sunny-faced members of the Daisy Family, for example, and the Pea Family, all with pods. Cole crops, such as cabbage, broccoli, and kale, are close kin, all in the same genus and species. What characteristics link these groups of plants as relatives?

Yes, goldenrod is in the Daisy Family!
Before you blurt out that all daisies have petal-rimmed flowers typified by sunflower and aster, picture the flowers of goldenrod, also a member of this family. And although all cole crops have waxy, bluish green leaves, just look how the plants vary in form. We eat the stalk of kohlrabi, the leaves of cabbage, and the flower buds of broccoli. Read more
EASY EDAMAME
/9 Comments/in Vegetables/by Lee ReichSoy Simple
I’m not going to ramble on and on in praise of the many health benefits of soybeans, their high quality protein, their healthful oil, and so on. Nor will I go on and on about how this plant, cultivated for thousands of years in Asia, has found its way into the manufacture of plastics and other hardgoods. Henry Ford was an early devotee of this plant, so much so that in the 1930s each Ford automobile ate up a bushel of soybeans in one form or another. I’ll also keep quiet about the gustatory alchemy that has been wrought on this bean to transform it into tofu and tempeh as well as ersatz meats, milk, and ice cream. 
What I won’t do, though, is restrain my praise of the simplest form of soybean (edamame), the fresh green bean Read more
PLANT SMALL, THINK BIG
/3 Comments/in Gardening, Planning/by Lee ReichChillax
If delayed gratification sometimes seems to be too much a part of gardening, it does teach us to appreciate the means to an end as much as the end itself. Especially with planting trees. Your vision might call for a towering maple or spreading beech in a corner of your front yard, but you can do no more than plant one, care for it, and wait.
Not that full-sized trees cannot be — and sometimes are — moved for instant effect. Read more




