Posted by JerryS on July 19, 2011 at 21:42:14 from (65.0.39.185):
I just finished helping shell two bushels of peas. It got me to wondering: what kind of peas do folks in different parts of the country grow for their freezers and for the local market?
Down here in my corner of the deep South if someone tells his peas are just about ready to pick, you know he's talking about purple hulls. If you see an ad in the paper of someone selling peas out of their truck patch, you know it's purple hulls. When I was a kid we used to grow some crowders and field peas, but mostly it was purple hulls.
In the early spring lots of folks have a patch of English peas, but come summer it's purple hulls by a wide margin.
Folks down here hardly know what a black-eyed pea looks like.
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Today's Featured Article - Third Brush Generators - by Chris Pratt. While I love straightening sheet metal, cleaning, and painting old tractors, I use every excuse to avoid working on the on the electrics. I find the whole process sheer mystery. I have picked up and attempted to read every auto and farm electrics book with no improvement in the situation. They all seem to start with a chapter entitled "Theory of Electricity". After a few paragraphs I usually close the book and go back to banging out dents. A good friend and I were recently discussing our tractor electrical systems when he stated "I figure it all comes back to applying Ohms Law". At this point
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