Gardening
Related: About this forumWoo hoo, I actually have some seedlings sprouting
Forgive me for being excited about seeing actual green things poke through the soil, but I have been far from successful at growing plants. I wanted to do it, though, and now I have 28 out of 36 different plants (4 Cucumbers and 24, half beefsteak, half brandywine tomatoes) sprouting! My tabasco peppers haven't peeked through yet, but they take a bit longer.
Who would have thought a brown thumb like me could get something to actually sprout? I'll be ecstatic if I can set them out and get them to actually GROW and bear fruit!
arcane1
(38,613 posts)Mine is not nearly as extensive as yours: one rapini broccoli sprout, and one green bean sprout. I have one more of each that haven't sprouted yet, plus one lima bean and two mystery bean plants.
It's been fun! I first tried this last year, since I no longer had a cat and wanted something to care for without too much responsibility And it is SOOOOO rewarding to actually eat something you've grown!!
Aerows
(39,961 posts)surface from the little peat pods I put them in. It was about 7 or 8 bucks and it made it easy for a novice like me. It has a cover for the first couple of weeks so my cat can't get into them. We'll see if the plants last longer than my spice garden did once I set them outside, but I think she will leave them alone. She's a good cat.
arcane1
(38,613 posts)In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)Nothing is growing in New York yet.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)These are like barely big enough to call sprouts, much less seedlings. It's just as well. Even here in the Deep South our weather is still too iffy. One day, it plummets to the mid 30's (on the Gulf coast in late March, what the heck!?) a day later there is a torrential downpour and you see animals lined up two by two next to a man building a boat.
In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)I grew up in Georgia before Atlanta became Hotlanta. I remember loving every spring.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)That should tell you how freaking ODD our weather has been this year. We had snow two or three times, and once, it stuck for a day and a half. Now it's weird fluctuations and then we had flash floods (in the area, but not where I am, though). I rained like the devil. You can't plant anything in weather that makes half the dirt float away because the yard is a swimming pool. I live on an elevated area, though, so it drained off without causing flooding. I feel so badly for the people that live in low lying areas .
In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)My first ex-husband was a yankee. We moved up here as newlyweds. A year later I was suddenly single in NYC.
As I moved around up here I always avoided living in the low lying areas. Never live at the bottom of the hill in the city.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)But that doesn't mean that if you live in Yankee territory you live at the top of the hill either
justhanginon
(3,327 posts)I live in the St. Louis area and we had a heckuva winter. Even tonight it is supposed to get down in the twenties. I didn't want to start them before I could leave them out. I've been nursing a parsley plant, sage and rosemary all thru the winter and that is the only window with a sun exposure.
You will love the Brandywines if you haven't had them before.. I grew some last year and they have a very good flavor. This year I am growing stuff only on the deck. My raised garden has done tomatoes for the last three years and I am going to let it rest for a year. I have had good luck with growing some tomatoes in 5 gallon containers and being single that is enough for me and a few for friends.
I am trying something new this year I found on you tube. It's called a pop bottle garden. I have it all ready to go and will try some herbs, a few kinds of lettuce and my beloved jalapenos. I will have to make a cage for it to keep out the squirrels and bluejays. They love to dig in the soil
Good luck to everybody with their gardens starting. Hopefully it will be a good year for all and lots of those good homegrown veggies.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)I have some black seed and some buttercrunch but it is probably too late to put it in actual soil! I'll try that, thanks for the idea!