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Date: | Tue, 6 Jan 1998 09:51:48 -0500 |
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Yeah, I'm real skeptical about corn too. I'm familiar with the plant, Japanese
Bamboo. Lot's of it on Cape Cod where much of my family lives. I have been seeing
it around here, but it doesn't seem like there's enough of it. Bloom time is right
though. Color too.
Not Purple Loosestrife. I know that one.
Pollinator wrote:
> In a message dated 98-01-06 08:09:11 EST, Michael Palmer wrote:
> >
> > Here in Vermont, we seem to have a new honey. Actually I've made
> > some on both sides of lake Champlain. Let me start again. Here in the
> > Champlain Valley we seem to have a new honey. Dark in color, and strong
> > in taste. Reports of this "honey" have increasing in the last 2 or 3
> > years. The biggest change in agriculture here has been the increase of
> > corn acreage in the last 2 or 3 years. Hmmm... From corn??
>
> Still real skeptical about the "corn." Another possibility comes to mind.
>
> An invasive weed, japanese bamboo is common in Pennsylvania and central New
> York, along the river flood plains, and I wonder if it has reached your area.
> It is not a bamboo really, though the stem is jointed. It looks like a giant
> wild buckwheat, which is actually is. It blooms in August, and makes a dark,
> mellow, delicious honey, sort of a mild buckwheat.
>
> Does it have a greenish tint when extracted? Lousy taste? Purple
> loosestrife?
>
> [log in to unmask] Dave Green Hemingway, SC USA
> The Pollination Scene: http://users.aol.com/pollinator/polpage1.html
>
> Jan's Sweetness and Light Shop (Varietal Honeys and Beeswax Candles)
> http://users.aol.com/SweetnessL/sweetlit.htm
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