15.1.12

Low-Cost Raised Beds...

   Buenos Morning, Internet.
             I've found it's generally more productive to set up new growing beds over the fall and winter for spring plantings.  For one thing, it allows any soil amendments to filter their way into the dirt, and the alternating freeze & thaw seems to help open up the soil - a great way to utilize natural cycles to minimize human labor.  For another thing, it helps to keep me focused on my production goals through the winter, with the added benefit of keeping the winter blues at bay.

11.1.12

signs of life

     My little babies are breaking through the dirt...
I sowed some seed Saturday, eager to test my lil Seed Starting Station & hoping to get a jump on the fast approaching cool/cole crop season.  Resisting a chronic compulsion to plant everything at my fingertips was difficult, but i managed to start with 3 flats:
  • Flat #1: American Flag Leek & Red Torpedo Onion:  this is my first year really breaking into alliums (this fall i planted German White and California Early garlic at me madre's, and perennial Egyptian Walking Onions[cool pictures through that link] in the keyhole bed). As such, i've never grown them from seed, but shoots came up today from the leeks and the onions. Really hoping these work out, cuz i think the joe-knee and i consume at least a pound of onions and a clove of garlic a week.
  • Flat #2: Waltham Broccoli: i planted the whole flat and within 3 days nearly all the seeds had sprouted.  Which is good, cuz we love broccoli. All of it: stems, shoots & leaves. It's probably good for you, our tastebuds declare.  Barring some kind of cataclysm, i should have some extras for trade or sale by the time you wanna put em in the ground (around the 3rd wk of February)
  • Flat #3: Early Jersey Wakefield Cabbage & Red Russian Kale:  these guys have yet to emerge, but they've got some time left. We're overwintering a couple of each variety in our neighbor Randy's bed, so if for some reason they don't want to sprout, we'll still have some to CHOMPCHOMPCHOMP.
The next step is to build some kind of ramshackle cold-frame, to harden off the seedlings & free up more room to germinate my little seedlings. I'll need plenty in the next few weeks to start sprouting my celery, lettuce & tons of tomatoes...
the plan is to start lots of transplant tomatoes: Radiator Charlie's Mortgage Lifter (click link for radio story), Amish Paste, Brandywine & Beefsteak.  These should be ready by the end o' March for trade, sale, and baiting potential gardeners... :)

in other news: i made the ... correct decision? ... and impulse bought 50 strawberry plants when i ordered my heating coil.  My logic was that if i spent $6 more dollars @ www.groworganic.com  i'd get two free seed packets (i picked Kentucky Wonder green beans & Southern Giant Curled mustard), saving myself around $5.  what i failed to factor in was the cost of shipping dormant strawberries across the country (nearly twice as much as the plants) and the fact that since they're shipped from the golden valleys of California, the berries would arrive on my door in January. Sheesh. They're in the fridge until I can figure out what to do with them.  All cuz Joani said she wanted some strawberries, not because i am a berry glutton.
So stay tuned to find out:
  • if the shua keep his strawberries alive until their preferred pea-synched planting date
  • which plants thrive in this suburban microclimate & which wilt like cabbage in the dog days surrounded by all this noise & all these people
  • if catastrophic climate collapse affects our growing season in a good way or just a wierd one
  • if shua will go crazy and live in a teepee in the backyard, scaring neighborhood children & neglecting to properly launder his loincloth
  • or something else...

6.1.12

shakin off them winter blues.

it's easy to get caught up in the hodge-podge of suburban life, but i'm committed to maintaining at least some semblance of focus.  most folks sit through the winter dreamily leafing through their seed catalogs, wishing for warmer days.  admittedly, i've been doing more than my fair share of that recently.  never one to sit on my laurels for too long a stretch, i've gotten proactive and set up a seed starting station out back.

it's weirdly nice out today and i don't feel like sitting here nose to the keyboard, so i'll just show you:


space to work with

joe-knee sealed up the plexiglass windows and the roof


inside a 2x4box i laid a 1/2in of sand, and my heating coil attached to some chicken wire i bought for some other purpose

using a scrap 2by, i flattened the heating element and covered with more sand
and then...

...apparently our camera and i only see certain colors. ah well.

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