Me and the Corn!

baymule

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2011
Messages
18,404
Reaction score
34,918
Points
457
Location
Trinity County Texas
digitS' said:
Is that you, Bay'?

Did you notice that a corn leaf has wrapped itself around your power line, lightening is flashing on the horizon and you are standing on a metal ladder?

. . . barefoot!

Steve
Yeah, I wanted to get a picture before it rained! :lol: The dogs at least had sense enough to be scared. :ep
 

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,075
Reaction score
1,712
Points
317
Location
VA
That's just not fair! My corn is hardly a foot tall...
 

baymule

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2011
Messages
18,404
Reaction score
34,918
Points
457
Location
Trinity County Texas
Today it was time to do something with the corn. Ever do something brilliant, only for it to be a really dumb thing to do? I planted Violets Multi-colored Butterbeans in the corn, on a trellis too, but I planted some in the corn. The brilliant part--beans fix nitrogen in the soil, corn is a heavy nitrogen feeder. :clap So far, so good. The beans could run up the corn stalks. Another brilliant move. :thumbsup The corn and butterbeans grew. Uhhh....... the corn grew TWELVE FEET TALL!! Lots and lots of long, very green corn leaves that the butter beans played hide 'n seek in. I have only gotten 2 very small pickin's of butterbeans, but I could see this had all the makings of a garden train wreck. :he Not feeling so very brilliant right about now. :rant

I planted this corn with the idea of letting it dry out so I could make cornmeal. It was about half dry. It had dents in the top of the kernels, but not dry and hard. But this is southeast Texas where it is HOT -- a good thing for drying corn. :weee But refer back to that southeast part. It is also HUMID and that is not good for drying corn. :tongue The shucks were getting black mildew and moldy spots on them. If I waited for the corn to get really dry, it would probably rot before it got dry. :barnie

I made the executive decision to cut the corn. :tools I pulled the ears of corn and stacked in a milk crate. Then I selected stalks that had butterbeans running up them and carefully unwound some of the vines so I could lop off the stalk tops to about 5 feet tall. Some I lopped off at the ground. Parker and Polly, the dogs, helped. They chewed dry corn leaves to shreds and made a fine mess in the yard. I cut them some stalk pieces and they played tug-a-war, before chewing them to bits too. Parker grabbed a cornstalk from the pile and joyfully ran around the yard with the stalk flying over his shoulder. I laughed till I nearly cried. he was having so much fun! :love A couple of men in a truck, leaving the tire store across the street from our house stopped and I could see them laughing too.

Now back to the brilliant part. I was feeling pretty dumb, not being able to even find the few butterbeans that were ready. I had visions of me searching the corn stalks and the butterbeans snickering behind a corn leaf, "Boy, is she ever dumb! She can't find us! Neener! Neener! Neener!" :smack But NOW I had turned the corn stalks into.......TA-DA!! BEAN POLES!! :celebrate

7949_corn_bean_poles.jpg


And I got a wash pan full of beautiful corn! I can't wait for it to finish drying so I can make some cornbread!

7949_corn_shucked.jpg
 

lesa

Garden Master
Joined
Nov 10, 2008
Messages
6,645
Reaction score
568
Points
337
Location
ZONE 4 UPSTATE NY
You've got to try the experiment- and then be ready to change the rules, as needed! Excellent! Enjoy your corn and your beans...
 

bj taylor

Garden Ornament
Joined
Feb 26, 2013
Messages
1,099
Reaction score
14
Points
92
Location
North Central Texas
that corn is beautiful. post a pic when you get it ground. I bet it will be beautiful. then, post a pic of the finished product.
great bean poles too!
 

thistlebloom

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 1, 2010
Messages
16,473
Reaction score
17,395
Points
457
Location
North Idaho 48th parallel
Pretty corn Bay! You'll have to post a pic of it made into cornbread or something.

Next year I think you should try some Painted Mountain corn. It's a north Idaho creation, and it makes some really gorgeous ears too.
I make corn bread with it and it's super!


Oh, I see I just repeated BJ....
 

digitS'

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
25,854
Reaction score
29,209
Points
457
Location
border, ID/WA(!)
Bay', your experience is very similar to mine with the 3 Sister garden. How do you think that I have "volunteer" Rattlesnake beans? They kinda got away from me!

Somewhere in the forum there is a recounting of my experience. Not the first Sisters garden that I grew way back during smoke signal days but after that debacle and about 30 years ruminating about it. I decided to grow everything for dry harvest. The beans still pulled down my choice for dry corn, Painted Mountain. I put poles in for them to climb on. Yeah, so much for them climbing on the corn.

It worked okay, especially since my pumpkin & squash vines were planted only on the south side of the corn/beans. There was no coming in from that side with the poles and sledge hammer. In time, I couldn't have gotten to them from the northside either as the vining plants worked their way thru. It did suppress the weeds but it suppressed me getting into that corner of my garden, too. I'd do it again but the Sisters thing has limits.

Oh, and you drying the corn off the plants -- I did that, also. Right about 1st frost, I pulled back the husks, tied twine around them and hung them under the carport roof for just a few days. They dried quickly.

Steve
 

baymule

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2011
Messages
18,404
Reaction score
34,918
Points
457
Location
Trinity County Texas
Thistlebloom, I might try the Painted Mountain corn next year. I am trying different varieties of vegetable so I can find what works here for me the best. This corn has grown well, is pretty and .......... don't know about taste yet.

Steve, I didn't want to wade through vines to get to the corn and butterbeans. I already know I don't have room for rambling vines. I wish I did, but they would have their own plot of ground. ;)

I can't wait to make cornbread! :drool
 

vfem

Garden Addicted
Joined
Aug 10, 2008
Messages
7,516
Reaction score
39
Points
242
Location
Fuquay, NC
You know, I tried this with my popcorn. It was such a wonderful plan, huh?! :lol: My beans got so heavy even before the corn was done, it pulled the corn over and I ended up having to put the corn back up with supports for the corn and beans. It would be 1/2 dz bamboo posts later that everything finally stood up. Luckily, the corn was sad and pathetic, and maybe only got 4-5 ft tall so I could reach.

This year I laugh because I thought of doing this with the sunflowers, and then changed my mind. My sunflowers and sorghum are now like 9-10 feet tall (My sad corn is only 4-5 ft tall again). Glad I just grabbed the bamboo and called it done.

I think you cutting yours down to the bean posts is just perfect, they look nice too! Not to mention how GORGEOUS your corn is. I'm craving cornbread myself now. Thanks! ;)
 
Top