Seeds

Planting Seeds

May 3, 2013

Planting seeds are a goal I have set for my garden this year.  It’s cost-effective and the varieties I can grow are much more diverse than what I typically find in nurseries.  My seeds are growing and I should be planting them in the ground soon.  Time to start another group.  I’m trying to stagger plantings every three weeks.  So far, this is what I’ve gotten started.  I’ve also started sunflowers and cherry tomatoes.

Planting seeds - squash

Planting seeds - squash basil and beans

Planting seeds

Planting Seeds

 

{ 0 comments }

This is very cool: 2013 Interactive Grow Zone + Seed Map

Here’s a Page with Lots of Useful Seed Info

Reading a Seed Packet: What do “Days” mean on the packet?

Make the most of your seed purchases: Top 10 Tips for Buying Seeds

Not all seeds are worthy of your purchase: Look Carefully At Those Seeds

This almost looks like more work than it’s worth.  What do you think?   Soil Blocks

This is an interesting way to germinate seeds: Imbibition

48-ryan-gosling-photo2

{ 0 comments }

This guy makes so much sense and I’d like to meet him – and I’d bring my shovel.

“South Central Los Angeles [is the] home of the drive-thru and the drive-by. Funny thing is, the drive-thrus are killing more people than the drive-bys.” Ron Finley

“Gardening is the most therapeutic and defiant act you can do, especially in the inner city. Plus, you get strawberries.” Ron Finley

“We gotta flip the script on what a gangster is — if you ain’t a gardener, you ain’t gangster.” Ron Finley

“If kids grow kale, kids eat kale. If they grow tomatoes, they eat tomatoes. But when none of this is presented to them, if they’re not shown how food affects the mind and the body, they blindly eat whatever you put in front of them.”
Ron Finley

More about Ron Finley….

{ 0 comments }

Pee-pee Planters

September 28, 2012

Here’s another one of my hare-brained sustainable ideas.  Toilet paper rolls as seed starters.  So far, so good.  Spinach is sprouting.

TP planter

{ 0 comments }

La Dame aux tomates….

April 17, 2012

I had the privilege of hearing Point Loma Garden Club’s Tomato Lady, Karen Greenwald, speak a few weeks back and I’ve been meaning to post the great information she shared with the Bridge & Bay garden club.   Karen is also a fellow San Diego Master Gardener.  Tons of great info.   So here goes:

Planting:

Seeds need to be started 8-9 weeks before you plant outside. Wait until April to plant at earliest to plant your seedlings, acclimating for a week before you plant. Dig the hole, drop in some fertilizer water the hole, then let it drain. To plant your seedlings, remove the branches except the last three at the top. Also, pinch off any flowers to direct the plant’s energy to grow. Scrinch (Karen’s word!) the roots. Bury your plant to 1/2 inch under the bottom set of leaves, meaning you will be burying most of the stem. This will encourage more roots to form and your plant won’t be spindly. Stake your plant right away. If you wait to stake later, you’ll cause damage to the roots.

Plant 3′ apart in ground. If you are container-gardening tomatoes, use a minimum 15 gallon pot. Any smaller than that is too small. Use putting soil, not dirt from your yard, filling your container 3 inches from top of container. Mulch only with healthy mulch.

Tomatoes require a minimum of 6 hours of sun. The more sun, the better, but they prefer morning sun to afternoon.

Fertilizing:

Karen likes to use Tomatoes Alive fertilizer. follow directions, don’t overdo it! First feeding is when you plant, then you’ll feed two more times – when it flowers and it fruits. Don’t over feed!

Watering:

Don’t over water. Water stressed plants taste better. Dont judge by midday droop. Look at plant first thing in the morning. If it’s limp, water only in morning. Dont sprinkle, water deeply. If you mulch, you should ony have to water once every two weeks, deeply. If you are container-gardening, of course, you’ll need to water more often than that, but again, don’t over water.

Miscellaneous:

Determinate or Indeterminate – does it really matter? But there are reasons to choose one over the other. Determinate tomatoes set fruit at the same time in a shorter growing season. Indeterminate tomatoes will grow a lot longer, are more productive, need to be staked.

Tomatoes and basil are good companions. If you buy a six-pack of basil, it will yield 60 plants because you can split each cell up to many little plants.

Marigolds planted around tomatoes thwart nematodes and white fly.

Tomatoes hate corn, potatoes or broccoli, so don’t plant those nearby.

I have followed Karen’s philosophy about having birds in the garden to keep pest populations under control. Keep the birds coming with bird feeders, but hold back from keeping the feeders full all the time to encourage bird foraging. The hope is that they’ll explore your plants for snacks, aka pests.

Karen is a big saver of seeds from tomatoes she loves. Paper towels are perfect seed savers. Write the name of the tomato you are saving on the paper towel, wipe seeds on the surface, throw in shoebox and keep in a cool, dry place until you are ready to plant next year.

Tomatoes don’t have to be rotated around your garden. Tomatoes are perennials. If your plant makes it through winter you might see sprouts coming up around the base. If you get this lucky, just cut the old stem back, and hope for the best!

Bon Appetit!

Tomatoes!

Oh, YUM! I can't wait!!!

{ 0 comments }

What Are You Waiting For?

December 28, 2011

Aaaah, the catalogs are starting to arrive. Let the shopping begin!

Garden catalogs

{ 0 comments }

I’ve got the springtime itch and right now the garden has a very additive quality that I’m finding hard to resist. I got a lot of seeds started this weekend in preparation for next season’s garden. I’ll start some more seeds in a couple of weeks in an effort to stagger plantings and get steady yields. It’s a good theory. Time will tell how it pans out! Here’s what I’m working on. A few interesting tomatoes from my friend, Martha, who picked them up in her travels. Lots of sunflowers. I wasn’t going to do corn this year because it does take up a lot of room, but how could I resist the ornamental corn? Three different kinds of squash raise my chances at being successful at having at least one not die on me. Radishes and peppers, well, just because. Although my flats are not to scale, each square in a flat represents a six-pack planter.

{ 0 comments }

Miscellaneous Monday 9-13-10

September 13, 2010

You might have seen this article about community gardens, but I’m sharing it here because it is a hot topic. The more, the better. Let’s keep talking about this! Bombs Away – Seed bombs out of a vending machine! Personally, broadcasting by hand sounds like a better way to me, but I do like the [...]

0 comments Read the full article →

Sweetpeas

September 11, 2010

It’s time to get sweet pea seeds started for blooms at the end of the year. Sweet peas are native to Southern Italy, so we have the perfect environment here to grow them quite successfully. I love the Cupani variety for the beautiful light purple color and unbelievable fragrance. You can soak the seeds overnight [...]

0 comments Read the full article →

Seed Savers

September 8, 2010

I’ve been harvesting seeds from my garden to use for next year. Seeds collected so far are: Black Cherry, Yellow Cherry and Momotaro seed.. These three pictures show the harvesting where I squished the seeds out of the tomatoes, removed the skins and poured the seeds onto multiple layers of paper towels, placed on top [...]

0 comments Read the full article →

Precious Time in the Garden….

April 25, 2010

Yesterday was a short stint in the garden, but I packed a lot of jobs into a short period of time out there. I am cleaning up out there, so I had to be a little ruthless about what I saved and what got pitched (gasp!). Really, it’s okay to pitch things occasionally such as [...]

0 comments Read the full article →