Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you a farmer? I don't think the soil and climate around here is appropriate for corn.
I'm speechless.
Why are you speechless? I asked this because half of my family are farmers. Corn does not grow well on their part of the state, it grows better in soil that is sandier. (Not all sand, but sandier than the soil around here.)
Anonymous wrote:You mean like at the corner of north Barton and north pershing?
I double dog date you to tell him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder what the demographics are for the responses. I would expect those younger than 35 and more highly educated are probably more likely to not be bothered by front yard vegetables than the Clint Eastwood retired auto worker demographic.
For the record, I'm 40, highly educated and HHI of $500k and would be fine with tasteful gardening that includes vegetables wherever they would grow best.
What a strange post. I don't see how being highly educated and having a high income correlates to corn tolerance.
Anonymous wrote:When I used to live in Iowa City there was a nice patch of corn planted in the grassy area outside the local gas station/convenience store (called the Cum & Go, of all things). It was awesome. I say go for it.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder what the demographics are for the responses. I would expect those younger than 35 and more highly educated are probably more likely to not be bothered by front yard vegetables than the Clint Eastwood retired auto worker demographic.
For the record, I'm 40, highly educated and HHI of $500k and would be fine with tasteful gardening that includes vegetables wherever they would grow best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't care if its tacky or not, but why grow corn? It is really cheap to buy it. Grow something else. Or better yet, stop eating corn.
A) freshly picked corn is superior to anything you buy
B) it's really cool to watch your plants grow from seed
C) it's educational
D) corn isn't cheap but seeds are!
E) you can make Halloween/Thanksgiving decorations from the stalks and ears
F) if you grow popcorn, it's even more fun than sweet corn.
my dad in southern md grows a garden. since we're all grown up and left home its gotten bigger and extended beyond a typical garden into the front yard. its totally acceptable there. such a rural area still for the most part.
he says its cheaper actually to just buy corn than to grow it.
It's only more expensive when you're buying all those gardening gadgets. We spend less than $100/year on seeds and fertilizer. Netting is a one time purchase and we re-use it. Even then, $50 will buy a lot of netting.
You spend $100 per year on corn?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you a farmer? I don't think the soil and climate around here is appropriate for corn.
I'm speechless.
Why are you speechless? I asked this because half of my family are farmers. Corn does not grow well on their part of the state, it grows better in soil that is sandier. (Not all sand, but sandier than the soil around here.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you a farmer? I don't think the soil and climate around here is appropriate for corn.
I'm speechless.