The Sylvania times. (Sylvania, Ga.) 2022-current, October 05, 2022, Image 4
Page 4 - Wednesday, October 5, 2022 The Sylvania Times thesy lvaniatimes .com F arm and Lan Bad news is time flies. Good news is you’re the The Farm Wife at Two Pennies Farm DIFFERENT Nancy Baker mElD “My Favorite flowering trees” Talmadge Fries Sylvania Sportsman, Inc. nnunra mil mm mis mm sft3msfwtsMM@gm3il.coa1 305 liftms Road Sylvania. Georgia 30467 Sylvania SPORTSMATt The Dog Fennels have bloomed, Ragweed is blooming, dried cornstalks are in the field and the smell of peanuts is in the air. Fall is in the air, with the cool temps in the mornings, it feels good. With fall firmly here, now is the time to plan to trim shrubbery, prune other bushes and prepare for winter. There is still time to separate and replant Bearded Iris before winter. Prepare your iris beds and dig the rhizomes. Trim the foliage and separate them to replant. Once you replant, remember to leave the top of the rhizome exposed, you can cover them with a light covering of pine straw for the winter, just remember to remove it in the spring. Now is also the time mulch your yard with leaves and pine straw. If you have pecan trees or other trees with soft leaves, you can mulch your shrubbery with them and then place a layer of pine straw on top. The leaves will decompose and create a rich layer of peat for your plants, which will hold moisture and nutrients. A few plants that are good for the winter months and are low maintance and are very beautiful are pansies, winter kale and snapdragons. They are easy to plant and maintain and they look beautiful. The kale comes in a variety of colors and adds an exotic look to the winter garden. The snapdragons are a breath of spring color in winter and if you keep the old blooms trimmed off the plant, it will rebloom over and over. Also, you can layer the flowers in the garden, by planting bulbs, such as daffodils, narcissus, tulips and allium in the garden bed first and then plant pansies on top of the bulbs and plant kale in the back and snapdragons on the side to give you a variety and color all winter. As always, join your local garden club for a wealth of friendship and knowledge. PLANTING DAYS ACCORDING TO MOON SIGNS Above-ground crops: 2,3, 6, 7,25,26, 29,30 Root crops: 10,11,12,15,16,17, 22, 23, 24 Seed beds: 15,16,17, 25, 26 Kill plant pests: 1, 4, 5, 8, 9,13,14,18,19, 21, 27, 28, 31 FISHING DAYS FOR OCTOBER 2022 Best: 6, 7,15,16,17 Good: 4, 5,10,11,12, 31 Fair: 2, 3, 8, 9, 20, 21, 25, 26, 29, 30 Poor: 1,13,14,18,19, 22, 23, 24, 27, 28 PLANTING TABLE FOR OCTOBER Gardens: Turnips, mustard, spinach, kale, rape, carrots, cabbage and collard plants, onion sets, smooth seeded English peas. Flowers: This is the month to begin planting hyacinths, tulips, jonquils, daffodils, crocus, sweet peas, larkspur, ragged robin, cosmos, poppies, annual phlox, pinks, candy tufts, pansies, violas, ageratum, stocks and petunia seeds. Rusty & Abh;e Robb.'ns Owners This week I want to feature two of my favorite hunting spots. I have traveled all over Georgia and I find that hunting or fishing at home all the time can get somewhat boring. So, I like to find new spots to hunt and do a little fishing at the same time. The first place is located in the North Georgia mountains near Blueridge. It is a beautiful place to enjoy the sites and sounds of nature along with hunting and fishing. 1. Coosawattee-Carter’s Lake in the north western part of Georgia is a hunters dream. It features Canoeing, cycling, hiking, primitive lodging, lake water fishing, private boating, jet skiing, and hunting are all available. 750 Powerhouse Drive in Chesterfield is the Coosawattee-Lake Carter’s State Wildlife Area location. There is no cost to enter the territory if you have the necessary hunting and fishing license required. 2. Chestatee Wildlife Management Area In Lumpkin and Brown counties near Dahlonega, Georgia is the Chestatee Wildlife Area. It is among the best public hunting land in Georgia. It’s a fantastic site for shooting deer, bears, and turkeys, as well as angling, with far more than 27,000 acres to discover. Find a comfortable spot, relax, and have fun on a day of sporting. And after a day of hunting, you can easily return to your life feeling a somewhat refreshing change. Thanks to the major hiking routes in the region, the vistas you’ll see here will stay with you forever, and the memories you’ll have of the wildlife will be even greater. Again, you will need the necessary hunting and fishing license. Enjoy! The first time I got a whiff of skunk, I was a kid in the car with my family. We were on a country back road on a summer evening with the windows rolled down and someone had hit a skunk. I thought my sisters were being awful dramatic with the choking and gagging. The odor was strong, but to me it smelled like lemon cleaner. (I did some research, and this is a thing.) Later that same summer we drove past a paper mill. Again with the dramatics from my sisters about the smell. They didn’t agree with me that it smelled like cloyingly sweet flowers. I have no idea why my sense of smell was skewed, but it abruptly righted itself when I passed menopause. We were driving through Savannah when I fell out over the smell of the paper mill. “Is this what y’all have been smelling all these years? This is horrible!” Same thing later that year with skunk smell. Having a defective sense of smell is one thing, but having a different sense of taste is another. As a diabetic I cheered the advent of saccharine; I would be able to have sweets again. Then I got a taste of it. Yuck!! Who would put this in food? I’m like that with all synthetic sweeteners. To me they all taste like turpentine or kerosene. Apparently this is genetic trait. But it turns out this is a good thing for me as I am intolerant of all of them. That means I can’t digest them, and you know what happens when you eat what you can’t digest. No one ever told me that this issue of digestibility increases as you age, or if they did, I didn’t listen. You can look at me and tell I love to eat. But apparently, you can wear your gastro intestinal (GI) tract out, and can lose the ability to digest whole food groups. Last year my GI tract suddenly stopped producing the digestive enzymes to process fish. It surprised the heck out of me. It could be just haddock and tuna, or it could be all fish. After what I went through with those two though, there’s no way I’m going to experiment to find out. So smell and taste are two of our five senses. That leaves sight, hearing, and touch. Proprioception (pro-pree-o-ception) is a part of our sense of touch. It’s the sense of knowing where our limbs are in space. My sight and hearing are no worse than anyone my age, but I am always carrying cuts and bruises on my arms and legs from banging into furniture, doors, gates, everything. And I fall a lot. It’s embarrassing when I faceplant in front of anyone. Apparently I am losing my sense of exactly where I am in space or how high I need to lift my feet to avoid cracks in the sidewalk, acorns, twigs, electrical cords, or anything on the ground. All of this to say, be gentle with those who cross your path in life. You can’t tell by looking, but chances are they don’t experience reality the same as you. Family Trip? Visit Jaemor Farms Ready to make a fall trip with the family? Work your way to Alto, Georgia and visit Jaemor Farms at Jaemor Farm and Market 5340 Cornelia Hwy Alto, GA 30510. The farm is a fifth-generation family farm with bakery featuring fried pied and homemade ice cream, a huge variety of fruits and vegetables, corn maze, event center and a variety of special events throughout the year, along with the prettiest Mums you will ever find in Georgia. Since 1912, the Echols family has grown peaches in the tri-county area of Hall, Banks and Habersham Counties in the town of Lula, Ga. Tucked into the foothills of the north Georgia countryside, our farm was recognized as a Centennial Farm in 2012. Jaemor Farms was established on family values and hard work that has been passed down for six generations in the Echols family. Once known as Echols Orchards, our family began farming with peach trees and row crops before focusing solely on the peaches and other fruits and vegetables that we could sell on our roadside stand of Old Cornelia Highway. Fast forward to 1981 with the construction of Interstate 985 and Georgia Highway 365, the farm had the opportunity to construct a new market for on- farm shopping experiences. This would become the third peach stand in Lula, therefore the family renamed ‘Echols Orchards’ to J.A.E.M.O.R. Farms. JAEMOR is an acronym for the third generation owners J.immy Allen E.chols and Valvoreth Mor.rison Echols. Now you can enjoy homegrown strawberries, blackberries, muscadines, scuppernongs, Concord grapes, watermelon, squash, tomatoe, zucchini, pumpkins and more during our harvest season. In 2006, we opened our first corn maze and began to participate in the state’s agritourism industry. Today, on average, Jaemor sees more than a million customers annually and we are happy to host each and everyone one of them to let them taste the difference family makes. The farm is open, Monday through Saturday 7 a.m. - 6 p.m. and Sunday 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Ogeechee Area Huapicc Caring For You! (912)764-8441 v (800)236-1142 - Compreheitsive Home Care 1 HcspipR Hesi ijjCTrttal iCarg^. 200 l^oo StneHUP Statesboro, Georgia ffljUMttc kii HttyttpMti art«SS di;* i*&*i Mf? ji;K3i r»!>jj. GALara fQlfrffl.il