Moderator: Team Cub
by beaconlight » Sat Aug 11, 2012 5:11 pm
Yep I know the feeling. We had that happen a few years back. We salvaged some and propped the rest up. It helped
Bill
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beaconlight
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by Pabst » Sun Aug 12, 2012 12:17 am
Hopefully you will able to salvage some of the corn!
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by Bob Perry » Sun Aug 12, 2012 6:08 am
That's awful. But that's farming. I'm thinking back when we had the "real" farm. If not a hurricane, tornado, drought, monsoon, a couple of times the army worms came through. And of course the weeds. Seems like a lot of things work against ya !
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by bob in CT » Sun Aug 12, 2012 6:43 am
Pabst wrote:Hopefully you will able to salvage some of the corn!
I picked a couple of coolers of Incredible and gave it away to my tenants and neighbors. I was kind of surprised to find the Peaches and Cream was starting to mature so I will look at picking that later. Been to darn humid to think about blanching and freezing. The young corn is starting to stand up on its own. I didn't touch it yesterday as we had more torrential downpours.
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by Billy Fussell » Sun Aug 12, 2012 8:46 am
I have had my corn to blow down, and it will try to straighten up on its own. If it is close to maturity, it will finish making just like it is. Not pretty though.
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by John *.?-!.* cub owner » Sun Aug 12, 2012 9:10 am
bob in CT wrote:Pabst wrote:....Been to darn humid to think about blanching and freezing........
Have you tried freezing it without blanching? Hardly anyone in this area blanches corn before freezing it in this area anymore.
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by Bob McCarty » Sun Aug 12, 2012 11:10 am
Bob, I think you need to get an aerial view of your corn patch and make sure it's not crop circles. Bob
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by ScottyD'sdad » Sun Aug 12, 2012 1:55 pm
I came home from Power of the Red, to some blow down, but not a lot of damage. Ed
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by grasser » Sun Aug 12, 2012 8:49 pm
Unless the stalks break, I've almost always had most of a blow down straighten back up. It's pretty amazing how they just curve up from the ground.
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by SONNY » Sun Aug 12, 2012 11:21 pm
We had some go down a couple years ago just a little shy of maturity, and it did fine!--Just kinda hard to pick and walk--eeerrr stumble down the rows to pick the ears off!!!---give it a little time and I think you will still get your freezer quota yet!--happy corn eating come the ole howling winds of winter!
We never freeze it on the cob since it wastes valuable freezer space plus tastes cobby, so we cut it all off and bag it in smaller bags! thanks; sonny
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by ScottyD'sdad » Mon Aug 13, 2012 12:42 pm
We never freeze it on the cob since it wastes valuable freezer space plus tastes cobby, so we cut it all off and bag it in smaller bags! thanks; sonny[/quote]
I agree with Sonny, about the cobby taste. (I admit to being a little picky, about sweet corn, though) I cook the corn, quick cool it, cut it off the cobs, heat seal, and freeze in boilable bags. (more for freezer burn protection, than for reheating ease, although it is convenient to reheat) Ed
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by Billy Fussell » Mon Aug 13, 2012 12:54 pm
Yep. Elves can be helpful sometimes.
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