> I have several questions and would like to present them here. If I
> should be doing so elsewhere please let me know.
> 1) Wanting to plant some Apple Trees but I am surrounded by Cedars.
> Is this a bad idea and should I just forget about the apples or plan
> on yearly fungicide applications?
Cedar apple rust can be a problem. The first thing i recommend is
choosing the right genetics. Apple varieties such as Liberty, Redfree,
Williams Pride, Freedom are resistant tot C.A.R. Fire blight and scab
are also big concerns. Choose resistant or immune varieties. You can
grow apples conventionally, organically , or holistically. The best
book on apple growing is The Apple Grower By Micheal Phillips and his
new book The Holistic Orchard too. It may be better to plant pest free
plants if you think they will recieve very little maintenance, Autumn
olive, Jujube, persimmon. . .are perhaps some other choices.
> 2) I have a lot of chunks of concrete. A lot. How effect would these
> be for capturing heat to sustain non-native plant species during the
> winter? Would they be more effective if they were painted black? If
> so, how much more effective and would it be worth the time and cost?
Potentially you could create a micro climate as warm as the south side
of a house in the winter. Planting fruit trees along masonry walls is
an old tradition, but I think it had more to do with extending the
season to allow fruit to ripen more than it did to prevent cold damage
in mid winter. Sepp Holtzer has been growing citrus at 4,000 ft. in
the Austrian Alps. He uses southern slopes and rocks. pretty low
tech. Here we have a significant number of overcast winter days so
collecting solar energy would not work in a week of zero direct
sunlight. Cinder blocks may not make a very good thermal battery as
they are shaped like heat exchanger fins as in a radiator, that means
they will loose heat much fast than a solid chunk of urbanite or rock.
Making a sun catch/ wind break would drastically dampen the effects of
cold weather, plant those non hardy trees on the south side of some
junipers(cedars), that might help a bit.Another thought is that Kansas
may have a climate more like Texas in 15 years any way. . .
> 3) Should I be using organics if I plan on harvesting seed? Are the
> seeds from vegetables grown from commercially marketed seed packets
> going to be worth harvesting?
I suggest you read Seed to Seed By Suzanne Ashworth to get some
background in seed saving. You are talking about annual vegetable
seeds, right?