Picture by Gretchen Quarterman, Lowndes County, Georgia, 23 January 2011.
Tag Archives: Georgia
Trouble –Lizz Wright
“It’s just waitin’ in the wind.”
-jsq
Stupid tractor pipe trick
Well, I was digging a trench for an electric line and I wanted it deep where I have a shallow ditch. So “Call before you dig!”
I called myself, “Self, where’s that sewer pipe you put in a few years ago?” Continue reading
Tripper’s local flavors
Whenever possible we us[sic] local meats, cheese and produce to provide our diners with fresh and dynamic flavors. Local products from the likes of Gayla’s Grits, Horner Farms, Sweet Grass Dairy and Thompson Farms allow Charlie Tripper’s to serve delicious and local farmstead fare year round. Menus are subject to change in order to accommodate seasonality and availability.
4479 North Valdosta RoadThis post owed to Buddy Boswell.
Valdosta, Georgia, 31602
229-247-0366
-jsq
Healthy Moe’s?

The Atlanta-based burrito chain will roll out a new nationwide menu on Jan. 24, top executives told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Coming soon to 420-plus restaurants will be grass-fed sirloin steak with no added hormones. The pork will be hormone-free, steroid-free and grain-fed. Moe’s says its chicken will be hormone-free and not raised in cages, and the tofu will be organic.Sounds good to me. Why are they doing this?
“The Moe’s consumers have told us this is something they want,” said Paul Damico, president of the brand. “We take that information seriously. They tell us they want fresh, they want sustainable.”Voting at the checkout counter works!
They have three locations in Valdosta:
1525 Baytree Rd.
Valdosta, GA 31602
(229) 293-06633145 North Ashley Street
Valdosta, GA 31602
(229) 333-06491500 Patterson Street
Valdosta, GA 31698
229-259-2506
-jsq
PS: And I learned that Moe’s is based in Atlanta.
Toxic corn and cotton pollute our streams
This is the same “gene from the bacterium Bacillus thuriengensis (Bt)” used in Monsanto’s RoundUp Ready cotton and peanuts and soybeans. Since Continue readingAn insecticide used in genetically modified (GM) crops grown extensively in the United States and other parts of the world has leached into the water of the surrounding environment.
The insecticide is the product of a bacterial gene inserted into GM maize and other cereal crops to protect them against insects such as the European corn borer beetle. Scientists have detected the insecticide in a significant number of streams draining the great corn belt of the American mid-West.
The researchers detected the bacterial protein in the plant detritus that was washed off the corn fields into streams up to 500 metres away. They are not yet able to determine how significant this is in terms of the risk to either human health or the wider environment.
Sprouting garlic
Collards
Something is living in there: Continue reading
Red spotted mushroom
Side view: Continue reading
French mulberry, or dwarf mulberry, becomes beautyberry
Further, William Bartram did mention it in his Travels of 1791, as
French mulberry.
Curiously, even though Google books does have Bartram’s book,
ngrams doesn’t seem to show French mulberry for that date,
but does show American mulberry.
Even more curious, William Bartram’s father, John Bartram,
corresponded with Linnaeus, the founder of modern
botanical terminology.
The currently most popular name is beautyberry, which turns out to be related to the scientific genus name, Callicarpa: Greek kalli means beautiful, and Karpos means fruit.
The plant has all sorts of uses: Continue reading