Thanksgiving week!
I unfroze my beans and used them to cook for thanskgiving meal.
I'm not the best cook so they turned out a bit overcooked but they were edible, so I was surprised.
Friday, November 28, 2014
Friday, November 21, 2014
Blog 11-21-2014
1. I harvested my beans today, I have a bag full as you can see in the picture below:
2. I found out that proper watering wasn't being done and that's why all my plants died except for my beans, some squash and a beet. My carrots never sprouted and everything else died.
3. The one benefit of having harvested all of my plants is that I did not have to worry about the freeze or weeding.
4. I'm planning on cooking the beans for thanksgiving if they stay good in the freezer till then.
2. I found out that proper watering wasn't being done and that's why all my plants died except for my beans, some squash and a beet. My carrots never sprouted and everything else died.
3. The one benefit of having harvested all of my plants is that I did not have to worry about the freeze or weeding.
4. I'm planning on cooking the beans for thanksgiving if they stay good in the freezer till then.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Blog 11/14
I believe that a university-required introduction to agriculture class
will not benefit the student body, simply because not everyone needs to be
introduced to the exact specifics of agriculture. In a day and age where we are
exposed to so many things, I believe that the average college student needs to
hone in on the things/classes/information that directly relates to their
mission in life. I don’t believe that a Finance major needs to take an
agriculture class UNLESS they are investing in companies that are heavily based
on agriculture for their suppliers and/or production. A mandatory class in agriculture would change
public perception of the agriculture over time simply because if more people
are aware of the specifics of agriculture, they will view it differently.
However, I’m not sure how
effective it would be in convincing people to invest their time, money and
effort into improving agriculture globally, nationally, or even locally. People
are very good at being self-centered and only focusing on the things that
noticeably affect their quality of life. People hear about all the atrocities
committed abroad as well as all the charities to help continents like Africa,
but most of those same people do not donate their own money. I believe that
classes today already provide enough diversity, even too much diversity and the
focus needs to be reined in on actionable skills and majors, not on the plights
of agriculture. Someone needs to fight the battle for better agriculture, but
it is not the average, uninformed and unskilled undergraduate university
student.
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