Garden · Uncategorized

This Week in the Garden

For the week of February 13-19

I garden in zone 5/6 and we are 15-16 weeks away from our last frost date.  This is what can be done in the garden this week….

  • Gather the seed starting supplies that you have on hand and purchase what ever else is needed.  Clean old pots and make markers.
  • Inventory the seeds you have on hand and order what else is needed.
  • Do a seed viability test on old seeds to see if they are still good to plant.
  • Start seeds of cold hardy vegetables such as leeks, onion and celery, spinach, Swiss chard, lettuce and peas.
  • Start seeds of hardy perennials.
  • Order bare-root perennials, plants and shrubs.  Also rhubarb, asparagus, artichoke and horseradish crowns.
  • When the weather is nice, you can work on the compost pile and do general tidying up around the garden.
  • Repair, sharpen and clean the garden tools if needed.  Tune-up and service mowers and power tools.
  • Take a walk through of the garden and make note of what is needing done. Make plans to fix, repair, or replace anything needing it.
  • Write you garden plans out and make a planting schedule.  Begin a garden journal.
  • Inventory any vegetables in cold storage and discard the bad.
  • Try growing sprouts.
  • Begin pruning fruit trees and shrubs.
  • Care for your indoor plants.  They are responding to more daylight hours and will begin putting out new growth.  Give a good pinching back and keep watered and fertilized.
  • Force branches for indoor color.
  • Apply dormant oil to fruit trees.

 


 

 

Garden · Uncategorized

Reasons to Start Your Own Seeds

 

Have you considered starting your own seedlings this year?  It may seen like a difficult thing to do, but with a little know-how it is easy to accomplish.

Here are some reasons to start your own seeds this year.

  1. Better selection.  Buy your seeds early to avoid not getting what you are wanting and had planned on growing. Seed companies have so many more varieties than the seedlings that are grown by the nursery, greenhouse or big box store.  In a previous post-SEE HERE-there is a list of some of the seed companies that can be ordered from.  Most of them have a website and you can order on-line. Or you can request a paper catalog be mailed to you.  I always so enjoy taking my time to read through the paper catalogs before I place my order.  The choice is yours, not only what has been started by the garden business.  A word of caution!  Be careful and thoughtful or you will get carried away and order way too much!  Don’t ask how I know this….
  2. Save money.  You get more for your money when buying seeds as compared to buying the usual 6-packs of seedlings.  For the price of the six-pack you get many more seeds in a packet. If you only need a few seedlings, most seeds can be saved for future use.
  3. Growing Practices.  You can have control over the growing practices.  If you are concerned about pesticides, herbicides, GMOs, etc, you can make sure of how your seedlings are being grown.
  4. Planting and Harvest.  When you grow your own seedlings you have control over the planting time.  You may want to start seeds early to be set out under a protective cover for an earlier harvest or start seeds late to have a later fall garden.  You can grow just the amount you need.
  5. Earlier Harvest. Some types of plants will need to be started indoors as the growing season is not long enough to get a harvest before frost, but many of the plants that can be direct sown can be started indoors to get an earlier harvest or flowers.  You can get a jump on the season.
  6. Successive Planting.  You can have control over successive seed starting to give a long season of harvest.
  7. Proper Plants.  You can make sure that you are growing plants suited to your region and location.
  8. Seed Saving.  Many of the plant varieties (open pollinated or heirloom) can left to go to seed and the seeds saved from year to year.  This is another way to grow plants that have become acclimated to you location.
  9. Quality Control.  You have control over the quality and quantity of the seeds grown.  You can grow strong, healthy seedlings.
  10. Food Security.  Growing your own plants is a good way to enjoy some food security in this unsettled time.  Grow enough to can and freeze and you will have food all year long.
  11. Avoid the Spring Crowd.  I always make a trip (sometimes many trips!) to the greenhouse in the spring, but if you want to avoid the frantic rush of everyone in town scurrying to buy those plants to get them in the ground in a hurry, you do not have to go there.
  12. Sharing and Swapping.  Starting your own seeds is a great way to do sharing and swapping with others.  For many years I started seedlings to sell at the Farmer’s Market in the spring.  The left-over seedings I would take to church and share with whoever wanted any plants, usually tomatoes. When church was over I would pull my van up to the church entrance and open the back with a sign-Free Tomatoes!  I grew lots of unusual heirlooms and got lots of questions about each kind.  It was a great joy to share with others.
  13. Fun.  Seed starting is a very good garden activity to do when those long winter blues are feeling heavy.  How nice to get your hands in the ‘dirt’ and be growing things when not much is happening outside. It is very fun to watch the seeds emerge and grow.

Have you ever started seeds before?

Planting Seeds

We can plant the seeds of kindness,

Seeds of hope and joy and peace.

We can plant, and we can water.

Only God can bring increase.

All God asks  is faithful planting,

Constant reaching toward the goal.

Then His blessed Holy Spirit

Can reach out to save a soul.

We know God will never ask us,

“Just how well did you succeed?”

All He wants is faithful living,

Faithful planting of His seed.

 

 

Garden · Uncategorized

Groundhog Day

February, a form

Pale-vestured, wildly fair-

One of the North Winds daughters,

With icicles in her hair.

Edgar Fawcett1847-1904

American poet

February has arrived.  And with it comes Groundhog day.  Groundhog Day is celebrated at 6 AM at Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney, PA, every year on this date.  So, what did old Punxy Phil see this morning?  His shadow!  Which means 6 more weeks of winter. This all makes no difference, as winter will leave when it is ready and Spring will come soon after.

Folklore says

“no matter how you measure,

its 6 more weeks of winter weather.”

But Groundhog Day makes a nice excuse to party in the middle of winter.  (But whoever wants to party outside in this frigid weather is a mystery to me!)

This date is also known as Candlemas, a traditional Christian day of lighting of candles.

This date is also known as cross-quarter day, the midway point between the winter solstice (shortest  day of the year), in December and the vernal equinox (equal daylight and nighttime) in March.  Thankfully the light is lengthening every day.

The setting of the sun gets later and later each day-by the end of

February the sun will set at 6:12,

March at 7:50,

April at 8:25,

May at 8:57

and by June, 9:08

I am looking forward to the returning of the sun!

 

Garden · Uncategorized

Start With Seeds

A List of Seed Catalogs

While the winter winds howl and the snow blows and you are tucked inside a warm house under a warm throw with a warm drink near by….

It is time to crack out those seeds catalogs that have been arriving in the mail.

 

What a welcome sight these catalogs are….with thoughts of great garden dreams as I peruse them.

Some of my past seed order packets…

And some free seeds thrown in!  Yes, I started them, planted them out and they grew well.  I had been wanting to grow some ancho chilis for chili rellanos and here they were!

Here is a list of seed companies to order from;

Park Seed Co-www.parkseed.com

Johnny’s Selected Seeds-www.Johnnyseeds.com

Totally Tomatoes-www.totallytomato.com

Vermont Bean Seed-www.VermontBean.com

Pinetree Garden Seeds-www.superseeds.com

Burpee Seeds-www.burpee.com

Gurney Seeds-www.gurneys.com

Botanical Interests-www.botanicalinterests.com

Jung Quality Garden seeds-www.jungseed.com

Southern Exposure Seed Exchange-www.southernexposure.com

Sow True Seeds-www.sowtrueseed.com

Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds-www.rareseeds.com

High Mowing Seeds-wwwhighmowingseeds.com

Harris Seeds-www.harrisseeds.com

R.H. Shumway-www.rhshumway.com

Wild Garden Seeds-www.wildgardenseed.com

Renee’s Garden-www.reneesgarden.com

Territorial Seed Co-www.territorialseed.com

True Leaf Market Seed Co-www.trueleafmarket.com

Peaceful Valley Farm and Garden Supply-www.groworganic.com

Terroir Seeds-www.underwoodgardens.com

John Scheepers Kitchen Garden Seeds-www.kitchengardenseeds.com

Just a few comments about some of the above companies-

I order many of my seeds from Pinetree.  I think you get more seeds for the money.

Territorial-I always get in trouble here!  The garden dreams run away with this catalog!

Totally Tomatoes-Any tomato you are looking for!

Vermont Bean Seed-I always like the thought of growing a huge variety of dry beans, but alas, I don’t have the room, so I just keep dreaming!

Baker Creek-This catalog is the the cadillac of seed catalogs and the unusual variety is amazing. It is real eye candy for gardeners.

Burpee, an old reliable company, but a little on the pricey side.

The Burpee seed display is already out in the local Walmart store.

This is just a partial list of all the seed companies that are out there.

Now is the time to start planning that garden!

Yes and No….

Yes it is nice to have a diversion for house cleaning, but No, I still plan on cleaning my house!  Will be deep spring cleaning the living room today. If only it stayed that way!

Do you have a favorite seed catalog to order from?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Garden

Growing Amaryllis

Can a flower bloom so beautifully in the dead of winter?

Yes!  Most everyone is familiar with the annual parade of Poinsettias at Christmas time, but here is another beautifully blooming flower for the winter season, Amaryllis.

I have grown Amaryllis for many years and they bloom so extravagantly and beautifully every year.

The double white Amaryllis ‘Marquis’ in full bloom this past Christmas.

 

Growing Amaryllis

The Latin name for Amaryllis is Hippeastrum.  Amaryllis is a bulb from South America and is a tropical plant.

Amaryllis flowers are large, trumpet shaped blooms at the end of tall leafless stems.

They come in many colors-red, rose, white, pink, salmon, and orange.  The blooms can be single, double, variegated, stripped or picotee.

It is very easy to grow, and if cared for properly it will continue to grow and bloom for you for many years.  Some have been known to grow for 50 years.

Amaryllis naturally grows in zone- 8-10.  To grow in my zone, 5-6, the bulb takes special care as it does not survive in our freezing weather.  But it is very easy to do.

If they are purchased by bare bulb, the bulbs should be soaked in water for a few hours, then planted into a pot with good potting soil.  I always purchase my plants already potted and usually from the clearance rack, so they are very reasonable.  But the selection is very limited.  If you are searching for a special color or form they would need to be mail ordered in bulb form.

Use a heavy pot, as the plant can become top heavy when in full bloom.  Make sure there are drainage holes so the bulb never is in standing water or it will rot.

Plant the bulb with the pointy end up, leaving about 1/3 of the bulb exposed and above the soil level.  Use good potting soil.

The bigger the bulb, the bigger the bloom.

Amaryllis grow best in a cool room- 60-70 degrees.

Place them in bright, indirect light.

Rotate the pot to keep the stem growing straight.  It is helpful to use stakes for support, as the blooms can be heavy and may flop over.

Water sparingly until the new growth begins, then water regularly.  Make sure the water is draining.

Amaryllis will bloom 6-8 weeks after being planted.  You can plan accordingly as to when you want them to bloom, and you can pot up multiple bulbs for a longer succession of blooms.  I wanted these white Amaryllis to bloom at Christmas time, and they did.  They were beautiful!

Amaryllis make wonderful cut flowers that can last up to 2 weeks in the vase.  A potted up blooming Amaryllis makes a wonderful gift at Christmas time!

After the bulbs are done blooming, cut back the flowering stalks.  The stems will eventually yellow and then they can be cut back too.  Cut back about 2 inches from the bulb.

Be aware that Amaryllis is toxic to pets.

I have had some of my Amaryllis for many years and they have bloomed faithfully for me every year.  This is what I do.  After the flowering stems and foliage is cut back, I place the pots in an out of the way place that does not freeze.  For me, this is the back porch, a regular area for in between things.

When the outside weather is above freezing, sometime in May, I put the pots in an out of the way place in the garden or on the patio.  There they stay, all spring, summer, and fall, getting rained on and fertilized along with all the other plants in pots.  When the temperatures begin to fall into the freezing range in the late fall I cut all the foliage back again, and take the pots to the basement.  There they will stay until I am ready for them again.  It is a cool, dark area.  I water them when I think of it.  I bring them back out when I am ready for beautiful blooms in about 7 weeks.

Something that I have done for years with my Sunday School class…we grow the Amaryllis after Christmas.  I have mostly girls in my class and I let them have free range in decorating our classroom for Christmas with items that I have collected over the years.  The class room is definitely not the nicest decorated classroom but they are very happy and busy doing it.  All of the Christmas decorations were taken down and packed away last week, and the row of Amaryllis set out.  The pots were watered and next week we will see if they have grown.  I always enjoy their expressions of excitement when they come back each Sunday and see how much they have grown.  I will keep you updated with photos as the Amaryllis grow and bloom.

Behold,

I will do a new thing,

Now it shall spring forth.

Isaiah 45:19

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Garden · Uncategorized

A Visit to the Conservatory


A trip to the Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens

A Christmas gift to me from one of my children was a trip to the Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  It was beautifully arrayed for the Christmas season.

The Conservatory is located in Oakland at Schenley Park on the hill. It is one of America’s leading conservatories and is a historic landmark.  It was built in 1893 and covers 15 acres.  There are 14  Victorian style greenhouses plus adjoining grounds that are all landscaped beautifully.  There are 23 distinct theme gardens, and they are decorated seasonally.  Their Christmas season display was impressive.

And the company was vey delightful.  The grandchildren seemed to enjoy touring the greenhouses as much as I did.

There were a number of train displays in one of the greenhouses.  A boys delight!  I also thoroughly enjoyed looking at all the intricate detail in the train displays.

There were a number of water features, some with live fish.  This one, with a glass viewing area was very entertaining to the littlest one.

Visiting a conservatory or botanical garden is a wonderful way to spend a winter day.  I can’t say that I got many gardening ideas from my visit, but it was so nice to spend time among living, growing things while everything is frozen outside.

http://www.phipps.conservatory.org

 

 

The January sun is climbing imperceptibly higher in the southern sky.  We are gaining 2 additional minutes of daylight each day this month.  Have you noticed the days getting longer already?

Gardening season will be here before you know it!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Garden

A New Gardening Year

 

Let us walk softly, friend,

For strange paths lie before us all untrod.

The new year, spotless from the hand of God,

Is mine and thine, O friend.

 

Let us walk straightly, friend,

Forget the crooked paths behind us now,

Press on with steadier purpose on our brow

To better deeds, O friend.

 

Let us walk gladly, friend.

Perchance some greater good than we have known

Is waiting for us, or some fair hope flown

Shall yet return, O friend.

 

Let us walk kindly, friend,

We cannot tell how long this life shall last,

How soon these precious years shall all be past.

Let love walk with us, O friend.

 

Let us walk quickly, friend,

Work with our might while lasts our little stay

And help some halting comrade on the way.

And may God guide us, O friend!

Lilian Gray, author

The old year has passed and a new year lies before us.  

It may seem like this new years garden is still a long way off, but it will arrive before you know it! We will soon be saying that there is so much to do with spring coming, how will it all get done?

Now, while days are cold, and snow and ice cover the ground, and you are sitting by the fire staying all cozy and warm, it is time to begin thinking and planning this year’s garden.

 

Anyone who thinks that gardening begins in the Spring,

and ends in the fall is missing the best part of the whole year;

for gardening begins in January with the dream.

Josephine Neuse

Here are some ideas to use in dreaming and planning this years garden-

1. Garden Books-(Do you have a bookcase full of garden books on all subjects, like I do?)

2. Gardening Magazines-(You’ve saved lots of those haven’t you?)

(Visit the library if you do not have any of these two)

3. Pinterest-(Ahh…the ultimate time consumer, but such wonderful ideas!)

4. Look through those seed catalogs.  They should be arriving in the mail about now!

Make note of those things that interest you. 

Make plans to try something new this year!

Here’s to a delightful, fruitful garden year to you!

 

Believe in possibilities

For with God all things

are possible.

Matthew 

19:26

 

 

 

 

Faith

Good Friday

This is how we know what love is;

Jesus Christ laid down his life for us.

1 John 3:16

 

Were You There?

Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

Oh….sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble!

Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

*

Were you there when they nailed Him to a tree?

Were you there when they nailed Him to a tree?

Oh….sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble!

Were you there when they nailed Him to a tree?

*

Were you there when they laid Him in a tomb?

Were you there when they laid Him in a tomb?

Oh….sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble!

Were you there when they laid Him in a tomb?

*

Afro-American Spiritual

It was the third hour when they crucified him.

Mark 15:25

 

Cooking · Garden

Growing Chives

There are a number of herbs and vegetables that are perennial, meaning that they will return year after year to give you a harvest.  One of my favorite perennial herbs, or one of my favorite herbs in general, is chives.

 

There are 2 types of chives, the common chive (Allium schoenoprasum) and garlic chives (Allium tuberosum).  The common chives have a mild onion flavor and the garlic chives have a garlic flavor.

Pictured above is the common chive, the one that I have grown for years.  This clump has moved with me to our current location and it has been divided and shared many times.

Both the leaves and flowers of chives are edible.

The most commonly used part of the chive plant is the leaves.  The leaves are hollow and grass like and are best used fresh.

The flowers are also edible and can be cut and used fresh while they are in season.  They are usually used in salads and as a garnish.

How to Grow Chives

  • Chives grow from small bulblets
  • Chives are one of the first of the herbs that are ready in the spring
  • Chives are milder than onions, and are members of the onion family
  • Chives grow well in any zone from 3-9. They are very cold hardy
  • Chives grow best in full sun
  • Chives like well-drained rich soil that has been amended with compost
  • Plant clumps of chives 6 inches apart
  • Chives can be divided every three years and re-planted out after the last spring frost
  • Water regularly, keep weeded and mulch
  • Can be grown in containers and can be moved indoors for all year use
  • Require minimal care, and I consider them well behaved.  Some of my reading says that the flowers heads, if left, can cause them to spread but I have not found it so.  If you have a problem with too much self seeding, just make sure the flower heads are cut off before they go to seed.
  • Will flower from late May till June.  Flowers can be used fresh or dried in cooking, or as an ornamental or cut flower
  • To harvest, just grab a handful or how ever much you need, and cut them off at the base.  If using the flower heads, just cut off as needed
  • Chives can be used in salads, dips, egg dishes, in potato salad, on pizza or as a topping.

My favorite way to use chives-freshly chopped over a baked potato with butter and sour cream.

What a lovely, delicious welcome to Spring!

Do you grow chives?

Praying for Ukraine

 

Garden

Reasons to Garden

The garden gate is opening….

March is here, Spring has arrived

and it is time to begin gardening in earnest.

Before we begin, let us consider some reason to grow a garden.

  • Beauty.  There is nothing as beautiful as a well-tended garden.  It can lift your mood just seeing the beautiful garden you have created.  Flower gardens are a thing of beauty, and vegetable gardens can be too.

  • Taste. There really is nothing compared to the taste of a just picked tomato, warm from the sun. Just the freshness issue makes homegrown vegetables taste better.
  • Grow safe healthy food.  You will know how the vegetables were grown and how they were handled.
  • More variety.  If you grow some of your own food, you can have more variety than what can be purchased in the grocery store.  The different varieties seem endless when looking through the seed catalogs.
  • Exercise.  Gardening gets you outside and moving around.  You will work your muscles with bending, squatting, tugging, pulling, lifting, and digging.  The exercise will lead to better sleep.  You get Vitamin D from being out in the sunshine.
  • Mental Health.  Working in the garden can lift your spirits, relieve stress and can be like a therapy for the soul.
  • Save money.  The price of a package of seeds will yield much more than the actual cost of the packet.  Granted, there are expenses in getting started in gardening, but you soon will recoup the cost if you garden year after year and are careful in your expenses.
  • Make money. If you are able to grow a good amount of produce or flowers, more than you can use, it is fun to see what you can sell with your excess.
  • Sense of accomplishment.   How rewarding it is to see what you can accomplish in the garden. Wether it is beautiful bouquets of cut flowers for the house or great tasting vegetables for the table, or just wandering through the garden you have created is a joy.
  • Sharing.  How nice to be able to share your excess produce with others, those that are not able to garden, or are no longer able to.  There are usually food pantries in town that would appreciate any donations.  Sharing with neighbors is a great way to make friends.

  • Prepare for winter food.  It is a wonderful feeling to know that your pantry  or freezer is stocked with delicious produce from your garden.  How nice to enjoy the garden produce in the middle of winter.  It will help beat the winter blues.
  • Training children.  Get the children involved in gardening.  Make it a fun time.  It will give children a sense of accomplishment, teach them things and make memories that they will carry with them.
  • Creative.  Gardening can be a great creative time.  Try new things and new methods of growing. Learn something new yourself.
  • Learning.  Gardening can teach us many things-Patience, perseverance, hard work, self reliance, how to deal with successes and failures and it can be very rewarding.

I am always amazed at this wonderful world God has given to us, and it is so beautifully displayed in how generous He is in the bounty of the garden.

Are you planning to grow a garden this year?

Praying for Ukraine