Radishrain

Things pertaining to life: plants and animals, gardening, cooking, food, botany, zoology, farming, ranching, wildlife, genetics, plant breeding, software, media, etc.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Announcements
I moved the lists of forums to the Links forum for easier access (and to reduce clutter in such as the Plant forum).

I added lists of links for greens, herbs, and livestock.

I've begun to implement my version of hashtags (which I just call tags). Nabble doesn't come with this functionality, but it does allow us to create it ourselves. See the new Tag button. Hopefully I'll improve it today (so users don't have to worry about formatting them properly). Whatever the case, it's still good to have. However, in retrospect, I'm glad to have had a significant amount of time learning how to do things without hash tags, before the idea of how to do this struck me.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Rules and Information

How to create hashtags:


Tags (as used on this website) are essentially the same thing as hashtags. The only difference is that all tags contain at least one underscore, and tags do not begin with a #.

When composing a message, press the Tag button and type in a tag. If you type spaces, they will be converted to underscores. If you only type a single word, it will put an underscore on the end of it. The underscores let searches recognize them as unique. Without them, it would often include things without the specific tag.

Selecting text and pressing the Tag button also works.

If you select multiple lines, it will make a new tag out of each line. If you add commas or semi-colons, it will treat each space between them as a new tag.

Only use alphanumeric characters in your tags.

Here are some example tags:

tag_
example_tag

Tags are just text and links to search results for your text. They don't slow things down. Use them as much as you want.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
I wonder if this would work for the folks in areas like Florida and Texas, for when they plant tomatoes and other crops:
https://www.outsidepride.com/seed/herb-seed/Mustard/mustard-seeds-white.html

tomato_
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
There's a huge rumor on the Internet that tomatoes taste better unrefrigerated, and pretty much everyone who says anything about it on the Internet believes it.

I've tried both, of course, and here's my opinion:

Tomatoes don't taste better or worse when refrigerated. They taste different. When refrigerated, they tend to be firmer, and have a nicer taste/texture for dicing and such, in my opinion. For eating fresh, I'd suggest keeping most unrefrigerated (and eating them sooner than later). For tomatoes you'll be storing for a while, I think they tend to taste better refrigerated (unless maybe you're going to cook them afterward or something). Unrefrigerated tomatoes continue to ripen faster (and get softer faster, which is fine for juice, but not the best for dicing and literally slicing).

Refrigeration may reduce certain flavors.

One variety I think tastes better refrigerated is called Valencia (a medium-ish orange tomato).

Tatiana's says that it is claimed that Black Pearl F1 (developed by Burpee), when refrigerated, develops "a unique extra sweet, 'Concord' grape flavor". She seemed skeptical to me, though. I'm not terribly skeptical, personally, but I understand why someone would be skeptical.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
This article about the edible qualities of nasturtians says that they contain vitamin D. That's a rare claim when it comes to reading about plants, in my experience. The only other plant I know where someone has made the claim about it is the Cape Gooseberry ground cherry; of course, the amount isn't said to be a lot for the ground cherry (not sure about nasturtians):

https://garden.org/learn/articles/view/4112/

The article says that the flowers have a peppery, zippy taste, and that the leaves are also edible (and it implies that the buds are edible).

I wonder if you can eat the seeds, too.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
How to Grow Tree Collards:
https://blog.gardeningknowhow.com/guest-bloggers/john-jeavons-tree-collards/

You can grow them from seed or from cuttings, apparently. They're perennials.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
This is a fascinating article mentioning how jackfruit (native to India) does in Hawaii, as well as some other general jackfruit information:
http://www.gardenguyhawaii.com/2013/04/what-is-jackfruit.html

I didn't know you could make jackfruit seed flour as a gluten-free substitute for wheat.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
Cottonseed is toxic to humans (not necessarily some other animals), but they've genetically engineered a kind with edible seeds for humans to eat: https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/10/17/658221327/not-just-for-cows-anymore-new-cottonseed-is-safe-for-people-to-eat

Sounds great. Finally they're doing something cool with genetic engineering. This isn't a statement as to whether I think genetic engineering is moral or not. I reserve judgment on that.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Announcements
I've been organizing the forums more, both for the sake of education, and to make it easier to add more kinds of vegetable forums. For instance, there are now forums for some clades and several orders. So, they contain families and such, and this makes it easier to build the forum structure. Don't worry. I plan to make more pinned posts to make it easy to find stuff, as well as more subdomains.

I've been adding new forums, too.

The Fruits and Nuts forum has been assimilated. I plan to make pinned posts to replace it.

The quick access links should be updated, eventually, too.
Radishrain by Radishrain @ in Life
An experimental seed-saving process that I do, and enjoy, is this:

I remove the seeds from the fruit, into a strainer, wash them in the sink and rub the gel sacks (if present) off, put them in labeled herbal tea bags, and zap them with a Z4EX in a quart or pint jar filled a couple inches or so with water. I zap 15 minutes per each of the three frequencies. Then, I remove the bags, get the water out, and place them (still in the herbal tea bags) on brown paper bags in a room with a fan.
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