jamesdeluxe
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2020
Is that ^^ Taylor Ham? I don't eat meat but as a NJer, I'm fascinated by it -- hopefully they'll come up with a faux version for non-carnivores! Here's the alleged story.
Is that ^^ Taylor Ham? I don't eat meat but as a NJer, I'm fascinated by it -- hopefully they'll come up with a faux version for non-carnivores! Here's the alleged story.
The swine is fine!!!!Is that ^^ Taylor Ham? I don't eat meat but as a NJer, I'm fascinated by it -- hopefully they'll come up with a faux version for non-carnivores! Here's the alleged story.
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So it looks like what @jasonwx saw in Ireland was Ramsons.I was thinking that they probably go to seed but wow they take a long time to mature.
There’s lots of ramp festivals in Appalachia, including North Carolina.Keep learning about ramps. Didn't know they can be found in the NC mountains.
thanks for the lesson!!!! are the ones i saw edible?So it looks like what @jasonwx saw in Ireland was ramsons.
According to the Seedman;
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“Ramsons (Allium ursinum), also known as wild garlic, is a wild relative of chives native to Europe and Asia.”
The dead give away for me (aside from being on a different continent) was seeing the foliage and flowers simultaneously.
Ramps are spring ephemerals. The leaves are only here for a few weeks and the flowers don’t come up until the middle of summer.
Quite a bit of my patch was transplanted from an old dump next to a corporate park. The woods there will most likely be bulldozed soon. I usually don’t pull bulbs but I do there and move them to other spots that are more protected.
March
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The thin leaved ones are seedlings in their first year.
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April
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July
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October
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I would say there’s a high probability of possibly.thanks for the lesson!!!! are the ones i saw edible?