Showing posts with label sunflower seedhead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunflower seedhead. Show all posts

Friday, January 19, 2007

Sunflower Update

When last we looked at the state of the front porch sunflower, it was Dec. 25 -- Christmas Day. The seedhead somehow looked warmer and more inviting than it did on Jan. 19 (below.) No doubt the angle of the sun. However, the seeds continue to disappear. And I hear periodic shouts from the jays, my main customers. A friend has suggested that a container of water put out daily to avoid freezing wins more bird friends than food this dry winter.

Just for the helluv it I also tried my new, exciting ability to do extreme close-ups.Here's how they render the empty holes (below)...


...and the tightly packed seeds.

Note: in case I've got outlanders worrying about our lack of moisture, this is to let you know we had maybe two big inches of snow all day.

Monday, December 25, 2006

Disappearing Seeds

The past three years, I have bought a giant sunflower seedhead for the birds. Actually, for the blue jays, it turns out. This year, I was lazy and left the seedhead on my front porch. Here's how it looked on December 7.

Taken in the morning light on December 16. I've had visitors, despite the fact that my Max Cat is in and out of the house. A couple of mornings, I have heard the jays shouting; it seemed to come from the front porch.

Here is the picture from December 23, just before I went up to Flagstaff for the Christmas holiday. Note that it's from a slightly different angle. I am happy that I have customers!

Note: OmegaMom promised that I'd have a post about her adventures, with her husband, on that favorite holiday pasttime, "some assembly required." I have the pictures, but got home late and too tired to pull it all together. Real Soon Now.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Here Comes the Sun!


One of the signs of the season is this little sales stand on McCormick at the foot of Willis. The owner of the rehabbed Victorian not only grows old fashioned single hollyhocks, but also a jungle of 8 to 10 foot tall sunflowers. Should you happen by, don't miss the fence of sunflowers along McCormick.


Standing right behind that for-sale stand is the third of the McCormick Street junk-yard horses. He's in the shade, which is why I didn't include him in my earlier post about Gene Galazan and his horses. Do take note that this horse has a feed bucket, tho I was disappointed that it was furnished with straw instead of more appropriate iron filings.


But, getting back to the subject, Iowa State University horticulture news offers this interesting history of the helianthus:

Native Americans in the U.S. have been using wild sunflower for food and medicine for at least 8,000 years. Archeological evidence suggests that Native Americans began cultivating and improving the sunflower as early as 2300 B.C. Thus, sunflower cultivation may predate cultivation of the "Three Sisters" of corn, beans and squash.

The seeds of sunflower were usually roasted and ground into a fine meal for baking or used to thicken soups and stews. "Seed-balls", similar to peanut butter, made from sunflower butter made a convenient carry-along food for traveling. Roasted sunflower hulls were steeped in boiling water to make a coffee-like beverage. Dye was extracted from hulls and petals. Face paint was made from dried petals and pollen. Oil, extracted from the ground seeds by boiling, provided many tribes with cooking oil and hair treatment. Medicinal uses included everything from wart removal to snake bite treatment to sunstroke treatment.

When the colonists and explorers sent seed from the New World back to Europe, the sunflower was treated mainly as a curiosity and a garden flower. It was not used as an edible crop again until it reached Russia. In Russia, the Holy Orthodox Church forbade the use of many foods, including many rich in oil, during Lent and Advent. The Russians eagerly accepted the sunflower as an oil source that could be eaten without breaking the laws of the church. Russians also enjoyed sunflowers as a snack food. In the past 50 years, Russians have bred sunflowers for high oil content and improved disease resistance. In 1966, an open pollinated Russian bred cultivar was introduced into the U.S. This and other cultivars began the first sustained U.S. commercial production of the oil seed type of sunflower.


For the past couple of years, I have bought giant seed heads of the Russian variety at Young's Farm. The blue jays love the seeds -- tho only the top half of this head (below) has been eaten. The remaining seeds are apparently too vertical for a jay to reach.


A delightful idea I came across several years ago is to plant a "jungle" of giant sunflowers for toddlers to wander. A variation on this idea: sunflower "houses."

For everything sunflower, you can visit Sunflower Lovers; they even offer posters (though not the Van Gogh!)
 
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