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On the Bulletin Board

How to use a computer bulletin board service, including background, the basics, what it can do for you, the gardener's bookshelf.

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The Seasons of the Garden

Now, as the season bestows the fullness of the harvest, the riches of the garden fill every sink and countertop. Reap the reward of work well done, and preserve the earth's bounty for the harsh days to come.

By Peter Hemingson

With personal computers becoming more and more popular, perhaps it's time to explore one of the lesser-known sources of gardening information: the agricultural bulletin boards. These notice-posters are made of electrons rather than cork, but they serve the same purpose as the more traditional type found in local supermarkets and other public places ...the free and open exchange of information. An example, and one that most home gardeners might want to get acquainted with, is run by the Indiana Cooperative Extension Service at Purdue University. Named FACTS, this bulletin board is available to anyone with a computer, a modem (a device that enables computers to communicate over telephone lines), and enough change in his or her jeans to make a longdistance call to 317/494-6643 in West Lafayette. Once you're connected and you respond to a query about your "terminal type" ("other" is generally the correct choice), you're presented with a menu of possible commands. Select "R" (for read) and you'll be able to peruse messages that other bulletin-board users have posted—everything from lamentations about the performance of the Illinois football team in the Rose Bowl to comments on the shortcomings of the telephone service in West Lafayette, Indiana. Reading the messages can be entertaining, but they rarely have much to do with farming or gardening. For those topics, you'll need to choose option "N," for news. Instantly, up comes the menu: There's a list of crops newsletters (which contain such items as grain price forecasts, farmers' evaluations of the corn program, and an emergency notification of the Environmental Protection Agency's suspension of the insecticide EDB) ...and a list of horticultural newsletters (even more up our alley, covering such topics as keeping flowers fresh, applying wood ash in the garden, planning a rose bed, pruning ornamental trees, planning your landscape, and starting seeds indoors). The real treasure trove, though, is titled FXMENU and is composed of agricultural computer programs that are available through the county extension offices to all of the residents of Indiana, as well as to anyone else with a computer that can emulate a VT-100 or VT-52 terminal. In this section you'll find such goodies as a home garden planner (the same one that Northrop King has licensed for commercial use) of considerable sophistication ...a home insulation analysis program. . . calculations that figure the cost of anything from credit to children's clothing ...and even a sample budget for a retired couple. Of course, there are more traditional agricultural programs, too: pork or beef carcass performance evaluation, for example, or a ration analyzer for dairy farms. The astonishing thing is that these programs, while copyrighted by Purdue, are available—to anyone who calls the bulletin board—for the price of a phone call ...which after 11:00 PM can be remarkably small.

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