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  1. Spung-Man

    Pine Barren Flora

    Looks like it to me too! You can use the young seedling leaves sparingly in salad, but we generally avoided wild lettuce in favor of dandelion and chicory. S-M
  2. Spung-Man

    Harmful Plants Gallery

    Chiggerbush is another name for sweetfern (Comptonia peregrina), but I don't know if it attracts or repels chiggers! Anyone willing to try this one out???
  3. Spung-Man

    Harmful Plants Gallery

    The young Smilax shoots are tasty too, but only the tender part that snaps like asparagus. Anyone ever try the sweetfern (Comptonia peregrina) or chiggerbush nutlet? Critters usually get first dibs, so it is a rare treat. I'm crazy about the spicy scent. Let's put things in perspective. Harmful...
  4. Spung-Man

    Harmful Plants Gallery

    Tastes like wild hickory nuts... I grew up on Mother Earth News, Organic Gardening, the Foxfire Books, and Euell Gibbons Stalking the Wild this and that. They resonated so well with the gathering ethos that existed with the immigrant farming community. It irks me that the following plants were...
  5. Spung-Man

    Richland Village

    That feed mill was Richland Grain Company and Paragon Poultry, my dad's operation. Its progenitor was founded by Andy Levari, who built the first feed mixer and warehouse behind Richland General Store in the '40s in support of the growing egg industry. We partnered with Andy on turkey...
  6. Spung-Man

    Garden 2016 Underway

    It’s not too late to plant if you can find seedlings for sale, and even possible to grow from seed Asian greens, cilantro, and radishes. I’m setting out plants of lettuce, greens, daikon, cilantro, parsley, Thai and sweet basil, scallions (to overwinter), snow peas, gherkins, and even a couple...
  7. Spung-Man

    Feral Hogs in the pines?

    No sign of pigs around Richland or Milmay just yet, but they supposedly once were here. There are some old accounts of pigs left to live off mast. Another name for a spung is a hog hole, so I envision that closed basins could be a favored haunt of theirs. Other spung names documented include...
  8. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    Thanks GermanG, It is a science disciplinary problem. I’ve been way too wrapped up with peer review. Trust me, that sausage making is not pretty. In retrospect my tone could easily be taken as bossy, even snarky. No one should have to feel challenged here and a number of eminently qualified...
  9. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    This might be a good time to explain how I became obsessively (fen-atically?) interested in this topic. Over a decade ago I served on a local environmental board, but was thrown off after discovering that two package plant sewer systems were secretly underway in my village to support...
  10. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    No problem, Bob, some Pinelands wetlands are perfectly suited to being called poor fen as they share many characteristics with cold climate fen systems! My apologies, as you have proven merit to the argument for a "poor fen" designation. Fen as you are using it describes what is happening below...
  11. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    McQueen (1990: 17) states, “A fen is a Sphagnum-dominated wetland…” He also has a great, easy to understand discussion of fens (1990: 29–31). I don't think I said 100%, but I am of the same opinion as McQueen that a fen should be a Sphagnum-dominated wetland. You bet, nice read in the dearth...
  12. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    Bob, thanks for prodding me to think this one through! I'm too focused on what is below the organic stuff. Of course there are mucky places on the old river channel terraces that are peat-like, and we call it peat out of practicality, but is much of it really peat ("true peat" of Waksman 1942...
  13. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    Bob, you ask good questions. Wetlands can be divided into two broad classifications, organic wetlands and mineral wetlands. Organic wetlands are also called peatlands. Peatlands by definition contain more than 40 cm of accumulated peat. Bogs and fens are peatland features (National Wetlands...
  14. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    Bob, I agree that Pinelands wetlands are not bogs. Apologies if I left that the impression that we should call Pinelands wetlands bogs. Collins and Anderson (1994) argued that bogs are specifically peat accumulating, nutrient-poor wetlands without water inflow or outflow. This is an important...
  15. Spung-Man

    Checkering Bog Near Montpelier Vermont

    True fens are wicked cool places, but there is little evidence so far that true fens ever existed in the Pines, even in the Pleistocene. Demitroff (2007: 125–126) provides all the picky details as to differences between bogs and fens: Bog and fen are peatland terms, applied to wetlands that...
  16. Spung-Man

    Garoutte Tavern in Historic Pleasant Mills, New Jersey

    That Steelman line is fascinating, and provides a glimpse into that elusive eighteenth century pre-furnace Pine Barrens. The legacy lives on! I have much interest in the Steelman plantation near Mays Landing. https://forums.njpinebarrens.com/threads/locks-bridge.688/page-10#post-130292...
  17. Spung-Man

    Take note if you fish

    We have a lot of great fish here that are under-appreciated. Eel is a delicacy that I grew up with, yet very few restaurants serve it. Our farmhands (Tussy and Cowboy come to mind) used to catch and prepare snappers (the turtle) for Bookbinders when I was a kid. It involved laborious...
  18. Spung-Man

    Garden 2016 Underway

    Back to the question about currants and gooseberries. Back in 1918 currants and gooseberries were banned in NJ (to stop white pine blister rust), but that ban was lifted in 1966 to allow red currents and gooseberries. The European black currant I believe is still listed. We are at the southern...
  19. Spung-Man

    Garden 2016 Underway

    Oh yes, tomato gravy is so much better than sauce! Anyone from South Jersey knows the difference. Romas, Sungolds, and Carolina Golds with mozzarella tonight, olive oil and balsamic; glass of Spanish granacha My San Marzanos are a couple days off. The regular basil grew like gangbusters then...
  20. Spung-Man

    Garden 2016 Underway

    Yes, you are spot on for toughness and taste, but I couldn't build enthusiasm from the family; same for other spinach substitutes like amaranth, Malabar spinach, and good King Henry. Swiss chard spoiled their tastebuds. That's komatsuna greens growing beneath the hot peppers in my first photo...
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