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Archive for the 'agriculture' Category

Sad afternoon in a melon field

August 21st, 2009, 2:45 am by davis

Walking through a field of rotting cantaloupes Thursday afternoon was a sad thing.

The rotting fruit and browning plants made it look more like fall, when the late-to-blossom fruit  fail to mature as the growing season runs out.

But not in August.

That, however, was the case in a field south of Vallonia farmed by Mark and Sue Kamman. They shared their story of how a wet, cool growing season is devastating part of the watermelon and much of their cantaloupe plants they set this srping.

You can read about it in Friday’s edition of The Tribune and online at Trib.Town.com.

Thanks for reading my blog, and thanks for logging on to Tribtown.com.

Tomato meets the deep fryer

August 13th, 2009, 6:42 am by davis

Hoosier voters failed to disappoint in one of their last elections — choosing this year’s so-called Indiana State Fair Tomato Signature Foods.

Their top selection tapped two choice foods — tomatoes and the brown food group (that, of course, is anything fried, deep, pan or otherwise).
Voters chose the Deep-Fried Pizza from Urick Concessions as the top signature food at this year’s state fair. They’re being sold in front of the Grand Hall on the fairgrounds.

This year’s fair, which opened last Friday and runs through Aug. 23, pays a salute to that fruit-slash-vegetable known as the tomato, if not tomahto.

The corporate sponsor is Red Gold, an Orestes-based tomato processor in northern Indiana. It contracts with farmers around the state, including here in Jackson County, to keep its line of products, including ketchup, tomato sauces and canned tomatoes, on grocery store shelves.

Other tomato-based foods spotlighted by concessionaires this summer at the fair include the Pizza Cone, Ya Ya’s Tomato Balls, Sun-dried Tomato Pork Burger and the Tomato Bob.

Do you like tomatoes?

I love tomato sauce. I love ketchup. I love pizza sauce and salsa. I even love stewed tomatoes. It’s the one way I can eat zucchini that’s not been turned into bread.

But I have a confession. I don’t like raw tomatoes.

Ann Lentini, whose accent reveals she moved to Seymour from New York, urged me to try them again, telling me that’s what her grandfather once told her. She’s been eating them ever since.

But I have tried them, over and over, at least once each summer.

And much to my Pop’s dismay, I just don’t like them. Pop loved snapping a tomato off the vine and eating it like an apple.

I don’t know. I think it’s the texture. That usually gets a roll of the eyes from true tomato lovers. Lentini gave an understanding nod as we talked after she bought some tomatoes Wednesday at the Seymour farmers market.

“I don’t like peanut butter,” she said. “Although I can eat some on a cracker.”

I’m certainly not in the majority, however, in my disdain for raw tomatoes. According to the USDA, Indiana ranked second in U.S. tomato production in 2007. That year, Hoosier farmers planted tomatoes on 10,000 acres.

That’s not including the thousands of home gardens like Ed Mills’ plot on North Elm Street in Seymour. He was selling tomatoes, watermelons and blackberries produce Wednesday at the market.

“There’s nothing better than a big slice of tomato, green beans and corn,” Mills said.

I’m down with the sweet corn and beans. Just don’t make me eat a raw tomato.

Thanks for reading my blog, and thanks for logging on to TribTown.com.

‘Tsunami’ of golf balls

August 6th, 2009, 3:51 pm by davis

It’s not often you get to use the word “tsunami” in a headline about a local news story when you live in southern Indiana.

But I’ll get to do that in Friday’s edition of The Tribune and online at TribTown.com as Aubrey Woods reports on a lawsuit filed in Jackson Superior Court I.

The lawsuit was filed by two couples who live on the Ash Hollow Golf Course south of Seymour. They seek relief from damages resulting from gold balls being hit onto their property.

Apparently some golfers are trying to convert par 5 hole in to par 3, shooting over one of the houses in attempt to record an eagle. In golf parlance, an eagle is scoring two shots under par on a hole.

Other stories we’re working on Friday’s paper include two that concern flooding in the area. Extension education Richard Beckort said area crops under flood waters will likely suffer, but to what extend remains to be seen.

And reporter January Wetzel tells a story about Seymour Christian Church framing a house and donating it to Jackson County Habitat for Humanity.

Thanks for reading my blog, and thanks for logging on to TribTown.com.

Alton Brown, Food Network should sample these good eats

July 26th, 2009, 8:01 pm by davis

There’s nothing like July in Jackson County.

There’s first the anticipation of the arrival of cantaloupes, watermelons, sweet corn and the Jackson County Fair.

Then, slowly, the month progresses and you boil or roast that first ear of yellow, white or perhaps mixed ear of corn.

The butter and salt, of course, the gravy on the kernals. There’s nothing like it in the vegetable world, although of course there’s nothing green about it.

Then, you start asking the produce managers and vegetable stand operators the big question of the month — where are your melons from? They’re used to it. Those really in the know realize you’re not just interested in whether the cantaloupes and watermelons are from Indiana. They know you want to  hear the words “Vallonia” or “Brownstown” or “Jackson County” because we all know that while those melons grown in Davies or Knox counties in southwestern Indiana are good, so much better than the hard, almost inedible melons we must tolerate — or ignore — all through the winter and spring, they still don’t compare to the orange and red delights grown in the sandy soils of Jackson County.

No, they don’t. They can’t. Maybe it’s regional pride, but I don’t really think so, and that’s my story and it’s the story I’m sticking with.

And then, of course, there’s the arrival of the Jackson County Fair, a time when all three of the best — the fair, the melons and corn — all collide. You can enjoy the treats, sights and sounds of the fair, all the while knowing you can pick up a melon or two or three on the way home, with produce stands just a few miles out of the way down one road or another.

What’s your favorite treat of July? The corn? Do you favor cantaloupes over watermelons? Do you like the long, striped melons or those that are squat and dark?

Do you like salt or pepper, or maybe both, on your melons? I like mine plain, thanks, although as a kid I always used salt on watermelon because Pop and Grandpa Davis did.

And what about butter on a roasting ear? How do you spread it? With a knife, fork, fingers, bread or some other method unique to your family?

Surely Alton Brown of The Food Network could devote 30 minutes of his “Good Eats” to these questions if not just on the greater qualities of Jackson County melons.

Hope you enjoy the fair and the good eats that Jackson County has to offer.

Thanks for reading my blog, and thanks for logging on to TribTown.com

A flu by any other name

April 29th, 2009, 2:34 pm by davis

Pork prices plummeted this week, or at least in the futures market for May.

That’s among reasons why Hoosier pork producers are happy to hear that government officials are now using the name “Influenza A (H1N1)/North American/Human” flu for what had been reported first as “swine flu.”

I’m not so sure “Influenza A (H1N1)/North American/Human” is going to fit into too many newspaper headlines, and so far the folks on TV seem to be sticking with “swine flu.”

We’ll report in Thursday’s edition of The Tribune and online at TribTown.com about how local pork producers and local health and emergency management officials are dealing with the flu outbreak.

Thanks for reading my blog, and thanks for logging on to TribTown.com.

State touts farming

March 11th, 2009, 2:29 pm by davis

Indiana’s top agriculture officials stressed the importance of the Hoosier farm economy, both in terms of those who till the earth and produce livestock to those associated businesses that supply them.

Indiana’s Director of Agriculture Ann Hazlett spoke to Jackson County farmers Wednesday at the Greater Seymour Chamber of Commerce Ag Breakfast at Jackson County Education Center.

See Aubrey Woods’ story in Thursday’s edition of The Tribune and online at Tribtown.com.

Thanks for reading my blog, and thanks for logging on to TribTown.com.

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