Event JSON
{
"id": "17c38ea444f8d5bdb3c6a15e854b14b0a8c18d12008605471725d2c1a525e6e5",
"pubkey": "1b63eae9a535021057f72db04b463d370b778c13f363765953708e54f4aa403c",
"created_at": 1718759285,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"proxy",
"https://regenerate.social/@B_Whitewind/112640608514120831",
"web"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://regenerate.social/users/B_Whitewind/statuses/112640608514120831",
"activitypub"
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[
"L",
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[
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"content": "Oh\n\"Recently a friend asked me where she could get some Sunchokes, she’d been looking and hadn’t been able to find any. My immediate reaction was, Don’t Do It! If you insist on planting, make sure you contain it, I told her. Define the patch with aluminum siding or some kind of metal from a scrap yard, drop it into the ground making an 18-inch barrier below soil level so the roots cannot get out. This plant would be called invasive but for the fact that it is native to North America and thus cannot be an invader, which has to be from elsewhere. So we call it aggressive.\"\nhttps://www.returnofthenative.ca/about/jaggyblog/jerusalem-artichokes-loved-by-bees-good-to-eat-but-exercise-caution",
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