Cleaning / Laundry / Cooking & Baking / Canning / Gardening / Entertaining / Mending / Sewing / Gracious Civility / Organizing / Handwork / Beekeeping

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Gardening: Gotta Get Growing!

My gardening season starts in January. Yes - January - even though living in a zone 5 means that we are still in the middle of winter. January's the magic month when seed catalog start showing their hopeful faces in an otherwise dreary mailbox. I suppose you know you're a gardening-nerd when your leisure-time reward is snuggling into a comfy hair to read seed catalogs. 
Come February, I have my orders planned out and placed and wait in anticipation for the spoils of my seed-catalog-shopping-splurges to arrive. February is one of my favorite months because the days get noticeably longer, there's usually a thaw - during which I love getting out to prune my fruit trees - and my stockpile of seeds starts to grow. 
Then March comes and it's show time. Time to get growing. Time to hydrate peat pellets and get those seeds started. 
And for those of you that might claim you have no space to grow anything - I found the perfect little solution at my local home improvement store: narrow seed starting trays that hold 12 peat pellets. Perfect for getting a jump on a patio garden. In my case, they fill the gap between my large trays nicely (heaven forbid any space should be wasted). 
About this time I ask my intrepid spouse to till the garden. We both know it's probably too early, but he does it to humor me. This early tilling does help work in the layer of fall leaves we've piled on and allows the soils to dry out so that when he tills the following weekend, it's ideal for my early spring planting. 
So what exactly do I have planted? Here's my breakdown for indoors and outdoors thus far:
Outdoor (direct sow) 
Peas (little marvel and sugar snap)
Scallions (green onions from seed)
Spinach
Butterhead lettuce
Corn salad (this is new for me this year - if it's an epic fail, I'll resow that area with other salad greens.)

Indoors (on shelves that span a basement window with grow lights mounted)
Marigolds (seeds harvested from last year's flowers)
Zinnias (seeds from last year's flowers)
Herbs (loads of basil, some cilantro, etc)
Petite sweet peppers
Patio strawberries (not sure this will work - but the seed catalog suckered me in)
Amaranth (two kinds - love lies bleeding and a tall variegated)
Strawflower (seeds from last year's flowers)
Coleus (seeds from last year's plants - first time I've tried non-commercial coleus seeds so we'll see)
Trailing petunia (again - first time harvesting these seeds so I'll be curious to see how they work)
Cauliflower Veronica (spiky chartreuse kind)
Nemesia poetry mix (I'm always looking for shade flowers)

Awaiting their turn in a separate box are all sorts of pumpkins, squash and gourds. As for the rest, I'll be spending plenty at the nurseries in about 6 weeks. 

I always try to save a few unplanted seeds so that in a couple weeks I can go back and resow those pellets that haven't germinated. 

In the meantime, I'll be making daily visits to check on my indoor and outdoor gardens to watch for the first signs of life. Does a body and a spirit good!  So go on and get growing!