Author Archives: maryjane

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Weed Dating

Here’s a fun one for you: weed dating.

“How will I ever meet someone in this concrete jungle?” laments the lonely plantain …

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Photo of broadleaf plantain by Ernst Schütte via Wikimedia Commons

Just kidding. Weed dating is not a service for unloved plants (or any other recently legalized vegetation).

It’s a newfangled way for earthy singles to meet and mingle within their comfort zone …

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http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Krieglsteins _posing_as_American_Gothic.jpg

… the farm, of course!

“Weed dating is the gardener’s version of speed dating, where singles meet over a vegetable bed and dig together for a few minutes before moving onto the next person, some even learning about the plants they are tending,” reports NBC News.

A woman wistfully awaits her weed date …

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Photo by Jack Delano via Wikimedia Commons

(where is he?)

as she dares to dream of what could be …

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Tee-hee!

All giggles aside, though, weed dating is turning out to be a wonderful way for people to connect in person rather than online (ick) in a wholesome environment rather than, say, a bar (double ick).

How cute is this?

Weed Dating from farmrun on Vimeo.

And, who knows? Weed daters might just sow a match made to last!

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American Gothic by Grant Wood, 1930, via Wikimedia Commons

Want to host a Weed Dating event at your farm this year? Check out the way they do it at Earth Dance Farm.

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Irish Trio Wins Google Science Fair

Three cheers for this lovely teen trio from County Cork, Ireland!

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Photo courtesy of Google Science Fair

Émer Hickey, Ciara Judge, and Sophie Healy-Thow recently won the Grand Prize in the 15-16 age group of the 2014 Google Science Fair.

To be sure, that’s pretty cool in and of itself, but it’s the particulars of their project that really take this farmgirl’s cake …

Reportedly inspired by Émer’s observations within her family’s backyard garden, the trio set out to study the effects of beneficial bacteria on the growth of cereal grain crops (and to think, we’ve just been picking and eating our veggies all this time).

“Émer and her mom were gardening, and she noticed nodules on one of their pea plants,” Sophie told National Geographic. “She brought that into school, and our teacher told us it was bacteria.”

As it happened, the girls’ class was in the midst of a lesson on the world food crisis, and they learned that the knobby nodules on plant rhizomes hold beneficial bacteria that boost growth. For visual reference, here are “Rhizobia nodules” attached to roots of a cowpea plant:

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Photo by Stdout via Wikimedia Commons

“We became really interested in what this bacteria can do and what people haven’t done with it so far,” said Sophie.

Atta girl!

People—lots of people—apparently told the girls that the bacteria wouldn’t have an impact on cereal crops, but they shrugged off the naysayers and decided to test their hypothesis on barley.

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Photo by Daniel Schwen via Wikimedia Commons

According to Scientific American, the team has tested the effects of beneficial bacteria on some 13,000 seeds over the course of three years. “We did a lot of experimental work in Ciara’s house,” Émer told RTE radio after their win. “First, we took over the spare room, then expanded into the kitchen, sitting room, conservatory, and the garden … It was quite a lot of work, but it has really been worth it.”

They found (naysayers be darned) that the microbes increased seed germination rates by 50 percent! What’s more, harvest yields increased by as much as 70 percent. The girls currently have a controlled field site planted with 3,600 seeds in their hometown. Émer says that further benefit may be seen in the reduced need for fertilizers and that improved germination speed is of particular interest to farmers in places like Ireland, where seeds can rot in the damp soil before sprouting.

For more details, listen to the girls explain their awe-inspiring research in their own words:

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Hear ye!

Welcome New Sisters! (click for current roster)

Merit Badge Awardees (click for latest awards)

My featured Merit Badge Awardee of the Week is … Linda Van Ausdell!!!

Linda Van Ausdell (#4347) has received a certificate of achievement in Farm Kitchen for earning an Intermediate Level Recipes Merit Badge!

“After I gathered up recipes with my mom, I put them in the computer and created a recipe book. I love the way it turned out. I’m glad it’s on the computer—I think I will get requests for the recipe book from other relatives.”

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Mr. G and Jellybean

I should probably assume that when something goes “viral” on the Internet, you’ve seen it already …

But what if you haven’t?

Some stories are just too heartwarming not to share—just in case. For instance, the story of Mr. G and Jellybean.

In a nutshell, Mr. G (a goat) and Jellybean (a donkey) were rescued, among many other animals, from an abusive California owner a few months ago. They were taken to separate animal sanctuaries in hopes of giving them happier homes.

And yet, Mr. G wasn’t happy. At all.

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Photo of Mr. G courtesy of Animal Place via Facebook.com/mrgjellybean

After arriving at Animal Place in Grass Valley, California, the 10-year-old goat stopped eating. For days, he wouldn’t even get up from the corner of his stall to go outside. Neither treats nor tenderness would perk him up despite a clean bill of health from a veterinarian.

There was only one thing to do …

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Photo by Grievous via Wikimedia Commons

There was only one “someone” who could come lumbering (lop ears and all) to the rescue …

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Photo of Jellybean courtesy of Animal Place via Facebook.com/mrgjellybean

Yup.

Grab a tissue and watch …

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