Guest guest Posted August 19, 2007 Report Share Posted August 19, 2007 Slim this is interesting about the climbing spinach. I'll have to look for seeds for that kind. Did you have to mail order them. I have several trellis for climbing veggies that go unused in the cooler months so this really interests me, as well as growing more in less space. Thanks for sharing the info you have found out about. Judy - slim_langer Sunday, August 19, 2007 9:13 PM Re: spinach I got the idea just recently of trying to grow some greens around the house. (!?!) I spend enough time tending and trimming some plants that really get pretty big and bossy but are themselves rather useless. I'd much rather have something to eat! There are several species and hybrids I've been reading about that should be able to grow as perennials in my (temperate) climate. The space spinach hybrid -- a so-called " three season spinach " -- should be able to hump over the summers here but if it bolts and goes to seed, so much the better for next year. The Malabar spinach sounds really interesting. I've just got some seeds for 'em and this is supposed to be a beautiful plant that can grow in vines on a trellis like ivy. Called bak choy in some places, it's perennial too, very nutritious, and I have a lot of back fence it can cover. Dwarf blue kale and dinosaur kale seem to like the summer weather here and I am planning on seeing how they (and some others, strawberry spinach, New Zealand spinach, leaf chard) all fit, washed and snipped, inside the rice cooker with some brown rice, lentils and spicy bean-garlic-habero sauces. Slim > > > > I would love to know what everyone loves to do with spinach? As for me I > love it in salads, on pizza and stuffed shells. Yum > Steph > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.