The problem is, he said the food won't have cricket flour listed in the ingredients. We'll have no way of knowing, unless we know all the brands these companies produce.
Buy a flour mill or a Vitamix blender and then you can grind your own grains to make your own flour. That's the only way to be sure you won't get the insects in your flour. We might just have to go with meat and veggies that we raise ourselves or buy locally where we know who raises it.
Right. My daughter wants to grow wheat but so far she hasn't planted any. I am fertilizing my garden spot today with cow manure and raking it in. Then it will rain tomorrow and I will wait a couple days, spread out my black plastic, pin it down and then cut small holes to plant. Trying to cut down on weeding as I am 64 and have a bad back. The Amish live next to me and I see their gardens look like this alot. I also may try some 'straw bale' planting. Just put your veggies in a hole in the bale that you have put potting soil in and plant. You can plant up to 3 tomato plants to one bale. You can plant about 5 or 6 cabbages. The straw breaks down and decomposes helping to feed the plants. Just saw this on the Internet front page of my browser.
Good for you! I used to use black plastic and it works well. I am going to try more container gardens using buckets and plastic bins. There are videos of potatoes/sweet potatoes yielding more in buckets than in the ground. Also rabbits/muskrats shouldn't be as much of a problem with the containers. I like the perennial crops like Asparagus, Rhubarb, Thornless Blackberries, strawberries, raspberries that I can count on each year. I have a Montmorency pie Cherry tree that is 9 years old, and last year I got over 30 pints to freeze and I got tired of picking. The State Extension office websites have lots of great information on the various container gardening projects including the straw bales. Growing wheat is a lot of work. Could you buy the wheat from one of your Amish neighbors?
The problem is, he said the food won't have cricket flour listed in the ingredients. We'll have no way of knowing, unless we know all the brands these companies produce.
Sorry. I thought he said that the flour had it listed. I guess we'll have to go online to the American made companies and search for what they have.
Buy a flour mill or a Vitamix blender and then you can grind your own grains to make your own flour. That's the only way to be sure you won't get the insects in your flour. We might just have to go with meat and veggies that we raise ourselves or buy locally where we know who raises it.
Right. My daughter wants to grow wheat but so far she hasn't planted any. I am fertilizing my garden spot today with cow manure and raking it in. Then it will rain tomorrow and I will wait a couple days, spread out my black plastic, pin it down and then cut small holes to plant. Trying to cut down on weeding as I am 64 and have a bad back. The Amish live next to me and I see their gardens look like this alot. I also may try some 'straw bale' planting. Just put your veggies in a hole in the bale that you have put potting soil in and plant. You can plant up to 3 tomato plants to one bale. You can plant about 5 or 6 cabbages. The straw breaks down and decomposes helping to feed the plants. Just saw this on the Internet front page of my browser.
Good for you! I used to use black plastic and it works well. I am going to try more container gardens using buckets and plastic bins. There are videos of potatoes/sweet potatoes yielding more in buckets than in the ground. Also rabbits/muskrats shouldn't be as much of a problem with the containers. I like the perennial crops like Asparagus, Rhubarb, Thornless Blackberries, strawberries, raspberries that I can count on each year. I have a Montmorency pie Cherry tree that is 9 years old, and last year I got over 30 pints to freeze and I got tired of picking. The State Extension office websites have lots of great information on the various container gardening projects including the straw bales. Growing wheat is a lot of work. Could you buy the wheat from one of your Amish neighbors?