

Might just cut off all my puny little cobs and throw them to the chickens. How do people dispose of the big stems? They ain't gonna fit in my compost bin! Can they be cut down and burnt? Guy Fawkes night soon!
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)
tbh its always a bit touch and go if you can successfully grow sweetcorn in the UK - they need longer to ripen then our summers usually allow, so try again next year. Mine were useless last year and turned out really good this year.grubbysoles wrote:My sweetcorn is rubbishThis was my first attempt and they came up quickly and looked spectacular, got some cobs growing,
um i feed mine the sheep and pigs.. not much help huh? i think they will burn well, they seem to dry out.How do people dispose of the big stems? They ain't gonna fit in my compost bin! Can they be cut down and burnt? Guy Fawkes night soon!
Mine were useless last two years, got some leovly ones this year for the first time( I agree with Red in my experience)- some were small though but sooooo sweet so don't throw them unless they are over.grubbysoles wrote: Might just cut off all my puny little cobs and throw them to the chickens. How do people dispose of the big stems? They ain't gonna fit in my compost bin! Can they be cut down and burnt? Guy Fawkes night soon!
That sounds really funny - and hey, it isn't a cob is it, your horse?Peggy Sue wrote:Gave one full cob to my horse who ate it just like us as I held it and rotated it- made me giggle.
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)
Oh God yes he is, a Welsh Cob -now I can see him eating another cob (horse) in my head- damn my imagination sometimes!Millymollymandy wrote:That sounds really funny - and hey, it isn't a cob is it, your horse?Peggy Sue wrote:Gave one full cob to my horse who ate it just like us as I held it and rotated it- made me giggle.![]()
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)
ive not tried drying and grinding them - be interestint to see how that wentMuscroj wrote:I got a few decent cobs, but for some reason they had only 'half' matured, some of the kernals were fat & juicy while others hadn't bothered at all, or seemed to have shrivled.
I have a few small cobs left, I wondered about drying them & grinding them to see if I could make corn pancakes, anyone tried this or would I need hundreds of cobs for that to work?