Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Garden is off to a late, but delicious start

It's been an odd year for gardening. Many plants got off to a late start, due to the cool wet spring. I planted beans FOUR times. We planted late, May 25, because we were out of town at the usual mid-May planting time. I think those seeds rotted, due to the continual rain in May and early June. So I planted again, and the same thing happened. Then, I was out of new seeds, so I planted some old seeds from several years ago, and they were duds. I gave up and went back to the store and bought some more seeds and they have sprouted and look like they're going to grow.
On the other hand, the lettuce, Swiss chard and the rest of the greens are coming along very well.
I have to brag about the seed variety, Burpee White Paris Romaine lettuce. I don't usually look forward to eating a salad, but this variety is delicious and the plants are healthy and productive. The weather definitely helped, as the conditions were optimal for green leafy vegetables.
We also had a healthy crop of spinach, and we're picking Swiss chard, carrots, green onions, parsley and broccoli. (We bought broccoli transplants). We were going to redo our raised bed garden, but haven't yet, and now there is volunteer dill and cilantro coming up. I didn't realize that cilantro is much like a weed. I've found it growing on the lawn. But that is a good thing at my house.
Everybody I've talked to has had a good garden this year. But the cold wet spring has adversely affected the real farmers who grow soybean and corn, because they couldn't get in the fields to plant the seeds early enough.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Growing herbs in the kitchen

On the left: Watex Plant Garden Desktop Kitchen Farm

My wonderful daughters bought me the Watex Plant Garden Desktop Kitchen Farm for my birthday present. They know how many times I've burnt dinner, running out to the garden to cut herbs for a meal, haha. But seriously, I have made some "farmer brown" meals, (to quote neighbor Bill), by going to the garden in the middle of preparing dinner. Often I set out to simply pick an herb to add to the meal.
Now, if all goes well, I will have herbs right on my kitchen counter.
The plastic structure has eight slots for the eight planters. There is a hole at the top to pour water into, and my daughters had me pour water in, to see how fast it went through. That was a good idea, because I saw that the water stopped half way up the side of the planter, and then the rest of the water goes through to a tray at the bottom.
My daughters also sent seeds, but after the experiment, I see that the apparatus would not allow water to make it to the top of the planters where the seeds are starting. So I am starting the seeds in the planters, in a tub, and when they have roots, I'll move to the Desktop Kitchen.
I'm not sure how well this will work, but it's tidy, compact and it might keep me from burning dinner.
For more information, visit watexgreenliving.com.

I emailed Watex customer service to ask for instructions, because 
this is all that came with the package.


Thursday, March 14, 2019

6 steps to starting garden indoors

It warmed up today, so I'm dreaming about gardening. Our garden is a mix of mush, ice, snow and muck. So I'm thinking about starting indoors.
I've been sprouting Mung beans for my gardening fix during the winter. It's so easy and offers nearly instant gratification.
For information on sprouting, visit wholefully.com/sprouting-101

I really want to get motivated and start plants indoors. That's not nearly as easy as growing sprouts, but when it works, it is very rewarding.

6 steps to starting garden indoors:
1. The best containers are wood pulp pots or peat pots. You can also use plastic cell containers with covers or egg cartons with holes poked in the bottom and saran wrap on top. (Or reuse the annual flats from last year.) Whatever you use, make sure it has drainage.
2. Fill with potting soil, preferably a mix with sphagnum peat moss. Moisten the soil.
3. Plant a few seeds, not many, about 1/8 inch deep and pat the soil lightly. Then cover with plastic and place in a very warm place, out of direct sunlight.
4. Keep watered. Once the seeds sprout, move the pots to a bright spot, a south-facing window is best. Water often, but not too much or too fast. The plants are fragile. If they get too big for their containers, move them to bigger pots.
5. When it gets close to planting time, it's time to harden them by placing them outside during the day, to get used to it, but not in direct sunlight at first. Bring them in every night.
6. When it's warm enough at night, transplant to the garden. Dig a hole slightly deeper than the pot and put the plant in, supporting it with your fingers. Firm the soil gently around the stem. Water carefully.
For tomatoes, it takes 6-8 weeks before they'll be ready to transplant outside. For Southeast Michigan, wait until Memorial Day to put tomatoes and peppers outside, because they are very frost sensitive and will grow much better when it's warmer at night. Occasionally, there is frost after Memorial Day, so watch the weather and cover plants when there's a frost forecast.
Southeast Michigan is mostly in Plant Hardiness Zone 5 with a few areas in Zone 6.

For more information, visit Burpee's guide to indoor seed starting, www.burpee.com/gardenadvicecenter/areas-of-interest/seed-starting/indoor-seed-starting/article10002.html