I’m a firm believer in growing onions and here’s why. Of all
the other vegetables I work with during the regular growing season, the onion ‘set’
has them beat in a couple of ways! First, you can buy them cheaply at the store
in a form that is already a growing plant! Second, once they are plopped into
the ground they require very little in the way of maintenance. (I’ve harvested
onions from one section of my garden that was overgrown with weeds and which received
little additional water other than what fell from the sky one year and they
were great)! I even did a video some years ago, ‘Onions are easy to grow’ that I think
captures some of my enthusiasm for this most wonderful veggie.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Is it too early to start peppers?
I dunno. But, seeing as how I had some bell pepper and
cayenne seeds that were leftover from the previous two seasons, I decided to
give a few of them a go. I figured that
this early in the year, it they don’t germinate then it’s no big loss. Then
again, if some do, I’ll have some early transplants to put out in the raised
beds.
I prepared two 6 cell starter trays using some Miracle Gro
potting mix that was left over from 2011. The mix was bone dry so I re-hydrated
in the sink using warm water. Since it is so high in peat moss content, it took
forever to get moist and even then, it doesn’t seem to want to held moisture
very well!
In tray A, I planted two seeds each of cayenne seed in the
front two cells and Cubanelle seeds from a 2009 batch in the back four. I had collected from plants that were grown
last year. Tray B has 2 seeds each in the front two cells and Sweet Hybrid
Experimental pepper seeds from God knows when in the back four. I’ll be
surprised to see anything come up in this tray although all these seeds were maintained
in the fridge in a sealed container! Still, I feel it’s worth it to try.
Especially, after paying a dollar a
piece for bell peppers at the grocery store this week! Now, while my
approach may look haphazard (it was), I feel it’s better to do something than to
sit and think about it for so long it never gets done!
Labels:
Danomanno,
Early pepper starts,
Forsythkid,
Old pepper seed
An orchid?
I'm not really sure what kind of plant this is. Maybe a member of the orchid family? My sister bought it a couple of years ago from a store when it was in flower. It then took me two years to get to flower again. Still, I think it was worth the effort!
Someone told me today that it may belong to the Phalaenopsis family!
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Time for the planting of the onion sets!
By gosh and by golly! It’s getting near time for me to plant
out some onion sets! I don’t know about the rest of you, but when I see a
display of these at my local grocery store I know spring is just around the corner!
I bought this small batch for about a dollar ten (there’s
about a pound) and think that may just be enough for an early planting in one
of the raised beds out back. Course, I’ll have to wait until the cold front
they are advertizing for the weekend comes and goes. Temperatures are supposed
to get down to the teens and I even hear talk of a little snow. If that last
part’s true, then I’d say bout time!
Later in the month of March, I’m hoping to install a new
cold frame in my front yard! I plan to order one of those ‘fancy’ store bought
jobs that will look appealing for being in such plain view. This 4 x 8 foot bed
will also get some really good soil, sand and amendments to insure a bumper
crop.
Why the front yard? Well, truth be told, the deer round these
parts are a pain in the rump when it comes helping themselves to my back beds.
So, this year I hope the new location will work a little better as they tend to
be shy of the street traffic. That’s the plan anyway!
Labels:
Danomanno,
early planting,
Forythkid,
Onion sets for 2012
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