In article <tYLyg.2930$TV.537@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
"BC" <bcphoto@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> "Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8Rfsk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:ANIM8Rfsk-EC1123.09145729072006@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > In article <O5Lyg.77234$Lm5.46882@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> > "BC" <bcphoto@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> >
> >> "Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8Rfsk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> >> news:ANIM8Rfsk-EB29EE.08100429072006@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >> > In article <rnrmc21jvns4q6v9c9bs67oog8p5ud67k7@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> >> > E Brown <three1983s@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> On Fri, 28 Jul 2006 16:05:05 -0700, Anim8rFSK <ANIM8Rfsk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> >> >> wrote:
> >> >> >
> >> >> >What do they do on the Kent farm? Grow alfalfa to make hay to
feed a
> >> >> >dozen cows? No wonder the place isn't profitable.
> >> >>
> >> >> We've seen the Kents selling organic vegetables at the Smallville
> >> >> farmer's market, used as the backdrop in a couple of episodes.
> >> >> epbrown
> >> >
> >> > Yeah, good point. So somewhere there are big gardens we've never
seen.
> >> > That nobody tends. :-)
> >>
> >> Lex put in an order for artichokes once for a party he was having and
> >> Martha
> >> was at a Farmer's market or warehouse making a delivery when she
> >> encountered
> >> the guy that could kill people with a touch. Seemed like it was
flowers
> >> though because earlier she was in the house of that terminally sick
lady
> >> and
> >> introduced the young killer guy to her when they were delivering
flowers.
> >> So I guess that is a case for the Kent's raising flowers? Not a big
cash
> >> crop in Kansas like the HUGE artichoke fields I've seen there.
> >
> > LOL, I had to look it up, but they DO grow Jerusalem Artichokes in
Kansas
>
> Somebody on Smallville actually did some research? WOW! I thought
those
> were better grown in the volcanic soil of California and Washington.
Did they show them? Apparently Jerusalem Artichokes are just misnamed
sunflowers of some kind. In the United States, real artichokes come,
for all intents and purposes, 100% from California. I suppose Martha
*might* grow a handful in her mystery garden or something; we used to
grow them in the backyard in Phoenix.
> BC
>
> >
> > Of course
> >> Kansas is the dairy state explaining the cows. Geeze or is that
> >> Wisconsin?
> >> Green Kansas cheese is one of my favorites. Green as the pine
forests
> >> that
> >> cover the snow capped Bob Dole mountain range that we see once in a
> >> while.
> >> :-)
> >> BC
> >
> > heh. Isn't Smallville the Cream Corn Capital? Although I recall
> > somebody posting that Kansas corn isn't grown for human consumption
> > anyway, but for feeding cows . . . all those cows on the Kent farm.
>
> We call that "horse corn". Only a horse could eat it. Feed corn it is.
> Bc
So, "Lana Feed"


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