Archive for October 13th, 2007

“Almost organic” apples

Posted October 13th, 2007 by Galen Lehman

Picking ApplesThis is my favorite time of year in Ohio. The leaves put on a glorious show, the sun seems to shine a little oranger (is that a real word?) and the air smells a little sweeter.

The best part for me is that I get to pick my fruit trees. Fruit trees are a great example of delayed reward: You prune in the bitter cold of February, you start spraying dormant oil before the buds even form to prevent bugs. Then you wait…

Besides the perverse pleasure of looking forward to delayed rewards, we grow our own fruit to avoid all the pesticides commercial fruit growers use. One respected website says, “Most pesticides are poisonous to humans and animals, but when properly used they are not harmful.” Somehow, that’s not too comforting!

The cornerstone of our method is to spray twice with Dormant Oil in the spring. But, I haven’t been able to get worm-free fruit without resorting to some heavy duty chemicals about one or two times. We’ve found if we use them at just the right time of the year, we can go pesticide-free the rest of the year and only have about half our apples come back wormy.

“Half wormy” doesn’t meet grocery store standards. But, at least I know where my fruit came from. It hasn’t seen chemicals in at least two months (which is several times the safety margin for “proper use”). Best of all, my fruit isn’t coated with artificial wax or shellac (yum!). (Commercial growers coat their fruit with wax to “seal in the freshness”. My experience is that it’s very hard to remove and I worry that it also seals in dirt left after improper washing and any chemical residues.)

I’d love to hear your ideas on stopping fruit worms without resorting to chemical pesticides.

Galen's Signature

Galen Lehman, President, Lehman’s

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Rolling my Own - newspaper logs :-) Help

Posted October 13th, 2007 by CurrentWave

Just purchased the newspaper log roller from Lehman’s and gave it a try. My kids have a paper route so it seemed a good idea….

The instructions to assembly the roller and then burn the log leave a lot to be desired! It took over 30 minutes for my daughter and I, plus my drill to figure it out and get it together, but that’s a different subject, and I digress.

When we tried to burn our first log the outside layer edge caught but quickly went out and the log just smoldered. I would light it over and over, but the only way for it to burn was for me to sit there and unwrap it as it burned. Very unsatisfactory. So I did a Google search on newspaper logs and found all bad news! Seems they won’t ‘burn’ on their own. They need a real-log to burn them, and then the extra ashes made from the paper can interferer with the wood coals causing the fire not to maintain it’s self as well as it would without the added newspaper log - Oy!

We burn in a Fireplace for a few hours at night to help heat the main room of the house. I do not run a fire overnight so I don’t need a slow burn.

I haven’t found anyone who has ‘Mastered’ the burning of these logs, taming the problems and making them worth one’s time -

So I’m making a plea…. for someone with a ‘good-experience’ at newspaper log burning to share your tips! Or I just wasted $47, and now days that is very painful for a mother of two.

Thank you,

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