Sunflowers
I am going to include both sunflowers and sunchokes or
Jerusalem Artichokes since they are both related.
Sunflower seeds pack around 818 calories per cup of seeds.
Jerusalem Artichokes clock in at about 109 calories per cup of roots.
Jerusalem Artichokes clock in at about 109 calories per cup of roots.
The sunflowers grown for edible seeds are annuals but there
are perennial sunflowers. In fact there is research being conducted to produce
a perennial sunflower with harvestable seeds. Now Jerusalem Artichokes are
generally perennials. However, to keep up bulb production they need to be
harvested at least every three years. With both sunflowers and Jerusalem
Artichokes the entire plant is edible. An interesting point of Jerusalem
Artichokes is that the plant retains the sugars in the stalk till around
flowering time. You would have to test your plants based on your plants cycle.
But it presents an opportunity to harvest the stalks as silage like sorghum if
the variety you have has a high enough sugar content. With sunflowers grown for
seed there are two major types. There is the oil seed sunflowers which are high
in oils. Then there are the seed sunflowers that are eaten for their seeds.
Sunflowers and Sunchokes for goats.
Every goatkeeper should plant lots of sunflowers, for they
are the finest of feeds available. The entire plant—leaves, seeds and stalk—is
edible and greatly relished. While the seeds are well-liked, goats will
hungrily gobble up the entire seed head when the seeds are at the early
"dough" stage. Just break or cut the head into pieces and the goats
will fight for them. The stalk too, will be devoured if cut into pieces.
Sunflower seeds are eaten any time of the year. Room can be made for
sunflowers, even in a small garden, by using them as stakes. Place one
sunflower seed on either side of your tomato plants when setting them out. As
the stalks grow, feed the leaves to the goats and use that strong stalk for
staking your tomato plants. Sunflowers are extremely rich in phosphorus and
have large amounts of iron, zinc, magnesium, vitamins A, D, and E, lecithin and
are over 25% protein. Sunflower seeds contain a staggering 7.1 mg of vitamin E
per 100gm of seed, as well as vitamins B1, B3, and B6.
Sunflowers and sunchokes as silage.
Sunflower silage vs. Corn Silage for Milk Production - April
1926
https://archive.org/details/sunflowersilagev210hend
https://archive.org/details/sunflowersilagev210hend
Sunflowers to remove metals from water.
SUNFLOWER PLANTS PHYTOREMEDIATION
Use of plants to treat water contaminated with Cs and Sr in the Ukraine.
http://www.gdr.org/sunflowerplants.html
Let the pigs harvest your Jerusalem Artichokes
Pressing oil seed sunflowers
You can press whole seed, shell and all when using oil seed
sunflowers.
Sprouting sunflower seeds
Easy Ways to Sprout Seeds for Your Chickens
http://naturalchickenkeeping.blogspot.com/2012/12/easy-ways-to-sprout-seeds-for-your.html
http://naturalchickenkeeping.blogspot.com/2012/12/easy-ways-to-sprout-seeds-for-your.html
How To Grow Sunflower Sprouts - Planting to Harvest (edited)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiMxQUG5_nM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiMxQUG5_nM
Growing Barley Fodder with a 5 gallon bucket. Simple Fodder
System (can also be used for sunflower seeds)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc_Q4I84Szc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc_Q4I84Szc
Sunflower stalks for bio-gas and
fuel
Sunflowers for Biogas – Breeding for Yield and Quality
http://www.asagir.org.ar/asagir2008/archivos_congreso/Sunflowers%20for%20Biogas%20%E2%80%93%20Breeding%20for%20Yield%20and%20Quality.doc
http://www.asagir.org.ar/asagir2008/archivos_congreso/Sunflowers%20for%20Biogas%20%E2%80%93%20Breeding%20for%20Yield%20and%20Quality.doc
Another Substitute for Firewood - Sunflower Stalks
Sunflower stalks were burned for fuel on the parries in the sod cabins before railroads brought coal.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fatkROKdsa8
Sunflower stalks were burned for fuel on the parries in the sod cabins before railroads brought coal.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fatkROKdsa8
Sunflower stalks for garden poles
Recycling last year’s sunflower stalks for bean & pea
poles.
https://www.facebook.com/OrganicGardening/posts/10152499063964642
https://www.facebook.com/OrganicGardening/posts/10152499063964642
Sunflower as a herbicide
Allelopathic potential of Helianthus annuus L. (sunflower)
as natural herbicide
http://www.regional.org.au/au/allelopathy/2005/2/7/2252_anjum.htm
http://www.regional.org.au/au/allelopathy/2005/2/7/2252_anjum.htm
We have focused on the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS)
and phytohormons (ABA and ethylene) in the biochemical and molecular regulation
of plant response to sunflower phytotoxins.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2634163/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2634163/
Induction of oxidative stress by sunflower phytotoxins in
germinating mustard seeds.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17216362
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17216362
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