Oh, right: the yard armadillo. It’s digging in, making noises like a hog: Continue reading
Tag Archives: Georgia
Bathing dog
Sweet potatoes
Hydrometer 1.011
Lowndes County farms small and increasing
Farms in Lowndes county are mostly small, averaging 145 acres, with the largest category being 10-50 acres.
Of course, that’s slightly misleading since so many small farms are rented by a few larger operators, some based in other counties. Still, small farms are the easiest to wean off the pesticide teat. Given that the average age of principal farm operator in Lowndes County is 57.9, something is likely to change soon as many of those operators retire.
We already know that local farming is linking up with local markets through Hahira’s summer farmers market, which has been going on for years, increased farmers markets, and through the new Downtown Valdosta Farm Days. That looks like a good direction.
-jsq
Dogs helping with white potatoes
Brown dog and yellow dog see mud.
They know what to do!
Brown dog likes to drink it.
They both like to wallow in it. Continue reading
Gretchen digging lots of potatoes
Gretchen digging the potatoes she’s selling today at
Downtown Valdosta Farm Days.
Look at the roots on that thing!
Hundreds of pounds of potatoes: Continue reading
Gretchen digging potatoes
You can’t dig
just one.
Here’s how Gretchen
digs potatoes with a shovel:
Heavy, as in more than 40 pounds of potatoes:
Yes, that’s a bathroom scale; only thing we had for something that heavy.
She learned all this from Terry Davis. He and I planted those potatoes. Pictures and videos by John S. Quarterman, Lowndes County, Georgia, 5 May 2011.
-jsq
Backwards?
At 100, Elsie Quarterman attends her Cedar Glade Wildflower Festival
Kim Cleary Sadler,
Assistant Professor of Biology at Middle Tennessee State University
and co-Director of the
Center for Cedar Glade Studies.
(Student of
Thomas “Tom” Ellsworth Hemmerly, who was teaching and couldn’t come.)
Dr. Elsie Quarterman, Professor Emerita of Plant Ecology, Vanderbilt University
Carol C. Baskin, Professor of Biology, University of Kentucky
There were classes, botany walks, owl hoots, and musicians.
Here’s the schedule.
It was sunny this year,
unlike last year’s great flood.
Next year, you should come!
Get out of town, take a walk in the glades.
Elsie got a guided tour, with
Tennessee State Naturalist Emeritus Mack Pritchard
and his successor Randy Hedgepath.
Here they are with Elsie’s nephew Patrick Quarterman,
while Gretchen Quarterman photographs a glade.
Here
State Naturalist Randy Hedgepath
consults with Dr. Quarterman about identification of a cedar glade plant.
Elsie got out of the car to look at this one with Randy and Ann Quarterman: Continue reading









What we do for excitement out here in the piney woods:
watch the electric meter run backwards.