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Best food for long term storage
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<blockquote data-quote="swampratt" data-source="post: 3595910" data-attributes="member: 15054"><p>Neighbor grew sweet potatoes and they were small like 1" to 1.5" diameter and long spindly things.</p><p>I got a walmart sack 1/4 full of them and ate some and stuck the bag in the perforated wood corner box I keep potatoes in.</p><p>A year later those small sweet potatoes looked the same.</p><p>They were just as hard as the day I got them. Tasted the same.</p><p></p><p>Carrots grown in the garden will grow through the winter here in central OK.</p><p>You can also fill a 55 gallon steel drum with fresh horse poo and that barrel in a barn will keep at about 80 or so F during the winter</p><p>months and you can grow plants in it. Father grew tomatoes in one in the winter.</p><p></p><p>I have never tried it ..Probably because I do not have a horse.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="swampratt, post: 3595910, member: 15054"] Neighbor grew sweet potatoes and they were small like 1" to 1.5" diameter and long spindly things. I got a walmart sack 1/4 full of them and ate some and stuck the bag in the perforated wood corner box I keep potatoes in. A year later those small sweet potatoes looked the same. They were just as hard as the day I got them. Tasted the same. Carrots grown in the garden will grow through the winter here in central OK. You can also fill a 55 gallon steel drum with fresh horse poo and that barrel in a barn will keep at about 80 or so F during the winter months and you can grow plants in it. Father grew tomatoes in one in the winter. I have never tried it ..Probably because I do not have a horse. [/QUOTE]
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