a farm i m gB Joyce Bapp ‘‘■“/jl^jjj -And other hazards When it comes to being cheerful-looking, few things can beat the sunflower. Over the years, plant breeders have developed mammoth sun flowers that stretch eight feet tall, grow heads a foot across, and in our garden, anyway act like radar beams for every finch in the neighborhood. Hybridists have also bred sun flowers in the more-decorative direction, which develop a much more bushy style of lots of small er, cutting-type flowers. We’ll list that as a possible experiment on next year’s list already started of “garden - ’94.” Then there are sunflowers that just do their own thing. Thanks to the messy eating habits of our birdfeeder regulars, volunteer sun flower plants pop up in all sorts of interesting spots around the farm the garden, the flower beds, the road bank, the middle of the dirt lane to the meadow. This year’s Sunflower Volun teer of the Year award goes to a determined little seed that some how wedged itself into a tiny crack between the concrete-block outside wall of the dairy bam and the asphalt pavement that runs against the edge of the wall at the front entrance. How it ever got there is a mystery, though some bird may have poked it in the crack for storage. Not only did it germinate there, this feisty plant has grown a slen der stem about 18 inches tall, which does a sort of curve out toward the sunlight from the shade of the barn wall. And then it opened a three-inch flower head with a row of single, brilliant yel low petals around the outside of the small seed-producing center. It just looks like a bright-yellow Smiley Face growing outside the dairy bam. I may take to watering ■BBBBBOBBBBBBBB it because its cheerful sunniness in such an unlikely spot is such an “upper.” Ten feet or so away, in the flower border, a small army of plant volunteers were comman deered several weeks ago and marched into a row along the bor der way on the opposite side of the lawn. Though I haven’t started calendula seed for several years, bright yellow and orange descen dants of the originals reseed each season. This year’s crop of calendula volunteers was a bumper one; I transplanted nearly 80 seedlings to edge the rose bed. A soaking rain for a few days set’em off on a growth spurt and nearly every see dling “took.” Though there was no way to tell which were yellow and which were orange, random plant ing spaced the colors fairly well. Now full, bushy and covered with continuous blooms, the bright “accidental” border is as colorful than any I’ve ever purposely planned. Sometimes even, the planned plantings turn into surprises. Though I’ve not grown lima beans for about 10 years, it seemed a good way to utilize a spare, empty row left when most of the vegetable garden had been planted. Stopping by a local gar den center, I picked up a pack of the only variety of lima bean seed had on hand. Fordhood 242 sounded like a winner when I looked it up in the Burpee catalog, a heavy yielder, bush lima. “Are these what I think they are?” I asked The Farmer recently, pointing out the lima beans, unex pected growth pattern. His conclu sion agreed with mine about the long, vining tendrils these bean plants were sending out. Pole lima beans were not on the planned garden agenda. Then I remembered the metal fence stakes and recycled plastic net wrap from hay bales that our son had erected in the garden last year for the climbing Sugar Snap peas. Central Region Fashion (Conllnued from Pag* B 2) and sharpening decision-making, and testing their knowledge of equipment and notions.” She said, “The most important knowledge is how to purchase things,” adding “what it is made from determines how you will take care of it.” Jesse Kocglcr, 14, from Centre Hall, Centre Co., was the only male winner with his flannel-lin ed, oversized, drawstring jacket. Made from dockclolh and cordu gon. /dais at the Altoona Ramada Inn’s large meeting room is the group of junior winners in the central-region 4-H Fashion Revue. Eleven counties of the 17, * ********************************* **^*^****^*^ a ***““**^**^-*^- J^*^*l B&B SPRAY PAINTING SANDBLASTING JPP^-., Quality Spray Roll Affordable Brush Specializing In Farm Buildings, Feed Mills - Roofs - Tanks - Etc., Aerial Ladder Equip. Stone - Brick - Restoration Gibbon’s Rd. RD #1 Bird-in-Hand, Pa. Answering Service (717) 354-5561 Those posts were stored,only a few feet from the garden, and two lengths of net wrap which had dis couraged the robins from stealing all our strawberries were currently unused. With The Farmer’s help g MILK. IT DOES A BODY GOOD. ItaaM MIDDLE ATLANTIC MILK MARKETING ASSOCIATION, INC. nour, Bedford, Co.; Doris Krum enacker, Blair Co., the rcgisiralion chairman; Melissa Zimmerman, extension summer assistant in Elk Co.; Beth Van Horn, Centre Co., assistant to the regional director and chairman of the judging com mittee, and Sandy Hall, Centre Co.; Norma Lash, Fulton Co.; De bra Gregory, Huntingdon Co.; Jane Bcightol, Mifflin Co., tally chairman and Jane Mecum, Perry to pound in the stakes, the pole Ipna trellis was in place in just a few minutes. If you planted pole limas that aren’t, guess where your seed got t 0.... roy, with big patch pockets, the jacket was of level 7 construction. Koeglcr said that last year he couldn’t go to states because he was a junior. He very much want ed a chance to go to the state fash ion revue. Koeglcr says he plans to become a corporate lawyer one day. Besides Kieffer and Covert, other extension agents working to make the central 4-H Fashion Re vue a success were Janice Stoud- JgL/ 7 CLOSED SUNDAYS, NEW YEAR, ' EASTER MONDAY, ASCENSION DAY, WHY MONDAY, OCT. 11, THANKSGIVING, FHIiniMIIE CHRISTMAS A DECEMBER 26TH. FISHER’S FURNITURE, INC. NEW AND USED FURNITURE USED COAL A WOOD HEATERS COUNTRY FURNITURE A ANTIQUES BUS. HRS: BOX 57 MON.-THURS. AS 1129 GEORGETOWN RO. FRI. 8-8, SAT. 8-12 BART, PA 17503