This is a journal of my vegetable gardens. Skippy was my first dog and he thought the garden was his, even though I did all the work. Now Suzie and Charley follow in his footsteps. We're located near Boston (USDA zone 6A). I have a community plot, a backyard vegetable garden, fruit trees, berry bushes, chickens, and bees. I use sustainable organic methods and do my best to grow all of my family's vegetables myself.
Saturday, March 31, 2018
Friday, March 30, 2018
spring is here - a good friday
The peepers (little yellowish wetland frogs) started singing tonight! The song of spring. They don’t start up gradually. About 4 pm today, they started in full chorus, peeping away.
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
planting sweet pea seeds
This is the method of planting sweet peas that I just learned from nw organic gardener.
nick the outer skin of sweet peas seeds - a large fingernail clipper works...
layer the seeds in wet paper towels...
check daily after 5 days...
as soon as they get their tails, pot each in a 2 inch pot with tails pointing down...
they don't all tail at the same time so plant them as they do....
make sure the soil is damp, not wet, and wait for first the sprout to break ground before watering again...
then put them in good light, like a sunny window...
no heat mat! peas don't like bottom heat...
when the seedlings have 3 or 4 sets of leaves pinch the tip...
then harden them off and plant them in the garden...
watch out for slugs...
btw, if after 8 days the seeds haven't tailed but have swollen, plant them anyway
The same method works for other types of peas (snap peas, snow peas, etc), except that they don't need to be nicked or pinched. They can also be planted directly in the garden after tailing.
Thanks nw organic gardener!
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
what's up today
- I'm planting my snow peas (inside) today,
- my little sweet pea seeds (in wet paper towels) are getting tails,
- my artichoke seedlings are starting their 10 day vernalization (below 50F) out on my patio
- my tomato seeds are planted (17 varieties), but they haven't sprouted yet
- my vegetable garden is totally free of snow now!!
- my garlic and my mom's are up - nice little 3 inch sprouts
- and I think I may be able to start filling my salad bowl from my winter tunnel greens this week!
- my little sweet pea seeds (in wet paper towels) are getting tails,
- my artichoke seedlings are starting their 10 day vernalization (below 50F) out on my patio
- my tomato seeds are planted (17 varieties), but they haven't sprouted yet
- my vegetable garden is totally free of snow now!!
- my garlic and my mom's are up - nice little 3 inch sprouts
- and I think I may be able to start filling my salad bowl from my winter tunnel greens this week!
Sunday, March 25, 2018
vegetable, flower, and herb plants for shade
Last Sunday I worked in the “Ask-A-Master-Gardener” booth at the Boston Flower Show. The most popular question I had was: What should I plant in my shady garden?
I have several shady areas in my gardens. Knowing what plants will grow there is helpful. Here's a list I've put together.
VEGETABLES
Full Shade
(None)
Part Shade (dappled shade all day or 4 hours of sun per day)
Leafy greens including arugula, beet greens, cress, collard greens, endive, kale, leaf lettuce, mustard greens, radicchio, spinach, and Swiss chard
Part sun (more than 4 hours of sun per day)
Broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, peas, garlic, beans, broccoli, cabbage, kohlrabi, peas, potatoes, and rhubarb. Also small beets, turnips, and carrots.
HERBS
Full Shade
Lemon balm, oregano, mint, angelica, chervil, mints, American pennyroyal, wild bergamot (monarda), and sweet cicely
Part shade (at least 4 hours of sun per day)
Chives, thyme, basil, parsley, rosemary, horseradish, and sage
ORNAMENTAL PERENNIALS (Zone 6)
Full Shade or dappled light
Hostas, wild ginger, ferns, Jack in the Pulpit, hellebores, mayapple, lily of the valley, sweet woodruff, trillium, foam flowers, black snakeroot, wild violets, vinca, epimedium, bellwort, lungwort, Virginia bluebells, Dutchman's breeches, meadow rue, liriope, and Solomon's seal
Part Shade (at least 4 hours of sun per day)
Alstilbe, day lily, ajuga, coral bells, bleeding heart, bergenia, forget-me-not, monarda, monkshood, foxglove, some ornamental grasses, lady’s mantle, bloodroot, cardinal flower, hepatica, Jacob's ladder, rue anemone, columbine, leopardsbane, platycodon (ballon flower), campanula, cranesbill geranium, toad lily, and turtle head
ANNUAL ORNAMENTALS
Full Shade or dappled light
Impatiens, browallias, coleus, and wax begonias. Also spring bulbs, like daffodils, crocus, scillas, snowdrops, and species tulips if discarded after they bloom.
Part Shade (at least 4 hours of sun per day)
Ageratum, tuberous begonias, fuchsia, sweet alyssum, lobelia, mimulus, feverfew, and dwarf salvias
This is a partial list that I will continue to work on. I welcome suggestions. What do you grow in the shade?
References: https://transylvania.ces.ncsu.edu/edibles-for-the-shade/
https://www.extension.umn.edu/garden/yard-garden/landscaping/gardening-in-shade/
Gardening in the Shade - Univ Missouri Extension
Brooklyn Botanical Garden: A Garden of Shade-loving Herbs
I have several shady areas in my gardens. Knowing what plants will grow there is helpful. Here's a list I've put together.
VEGETABLES
Full Shade
(None)
Part Shade (dappled shade all day or 4 hours of sun per day)
Leafy greens including arugula, beet greens, cress, collard greens, endive, kale, leaf lettuce, mustard greens, radicchio, spinach, and Swiss chard
Part sun (more than 4 hours of sun per day)
Broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, peas, garlic, beans, broccoli, cabbage, kohlrabi, peas, potatoes, and rhubarb. Also small beets, turnips, and carrots.
HERBS
Full Shade
Lemon balm, oregano, mint, angelica, chervil, mints, American pennyroyal, wild bergamot (monarda), and sweet cicely
Part shade (at least 4 hours of sun per day)
Chives, thyme, basil, parsley, rosemary, horseradish, and sage
ORNAMENTAL PERENNIALS (Zone 6)
Full Shade or dappled light
Hostas, wild ginger, ferns, Jack in the Pulpit, hellebores, mayapple, lily of the valley, sweet woodruff, trillium, foam flowers, black snakeroot, wild violets, vinca, epimedium, bellwort, lungwort, Virginia bluebells, Dutchman's breeches, meadow rue, liriope, and Solomon's seal
Part Shade (at least 4 hours of sun per day)
Alstilbe, day lily, ajuga, coral bells, bleeding heart, bergenia, forget-me-not, monarda, monkshood, foxglove, some ornamental grasses, lady’s mantle, bloodroot, cardinal flower, hepatica, Jacob's ladder, rue anemone, columbine, leopardsbane, platycodon (ballon flower), campanula, cranesbill geranium, toad lily, and turtle head
ANNUAL ORNAMENTALS
Full Shade or dappled light
Impatiens, browallias, coleus, and wax begonias. Also spring bulbs, like daffodils, crocus, scillas, snowdrops, and species tulips if discarded after they bloom.
Part Shade (at least 4 hours of sun per day)
Ageratum, tuberous begonias, fuchsia, sweet alyssum, lobelia, mimulus, feverfew, and dwarf salvias
This is a partial list that I will continue to work on. I welcome suggestions. What do you grow in the shade?
References: https://transylvania.ces.ncsu.edu/edibles-for-the-shade/
https://www.extension.umn.edu/garden/yard-garden/landscaping/gardening-in-shade/
Gardening in the Shade - Univ Missouri Extension
Brooklyn Botanical Garden: A Garden of Shade-loving Herbs
Saturday, March 24, 2018
Friday, March 23, 2018
a little more spring ....
We only got a dusting of snow from the storm yesterday. Today the sun is shining. I was listening to the chickadees singing their spring song for the first time - dee-dee. We have a couple patches of bare ground in the yard. The warmest areas. And some spring blue bells are starting to inch up. The hellebore and snow drops are still covered, but it's nice to feel a little bit of spring.
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
first day of spring
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
a gardener's lament
My muscles are sore. My hands from holding the snow shovel. My shoulders and arms from lifting the sticky snow and throwing it off to the side. In better weather, I park my car out by my mom's garden to unload seedlings and compost. This time, I parked my car out near the garden to avoid trees falling on it. I shoveled off the 2 feet of snow piled on top. Shoveled the 20 or so feet around it where the plow couldn't reach. Shoveled my mom's walkway and the driveway edges. Of course the feathery white wonderland after a snow storm is beautiful. But I look forward to blisters from turning in compost and pushing a wheelbarrow. Sunburn instead of soggy cold wet clothing. And rich brown soil instead of all this white.
Tuesday, March 13, 2018
mom's garden during ANOTHER March nor'easter
Arrgh! (Or as my sister wrote, AYFKM!!?) We're in the middle of our third nor'easter in 10 days. The first was 2 inches of heavy rain with very high winds and lot's of coastal flooding. The second was about 8 inches of very heavy wet snow that brought down lots of trees. This one is a blizzard that will give us 2 feet of fluffy snow with high winds. Some years, I'm out planting peas about now.
Thursday, March 08, 2018
March nor'easter aftermath
Here's the aftermath of the nor'easter we had last night. Eight inches of very heavy wet snow piled onto the trees and brought down many branches, including two huge ones from my beautiful Carolina silver bell that landed on my chicken coop. No damage to the coop but it took a lot of effort to clear and burn the fallen wood.
I had built a lean-to over my new little lettuce tunnel and the plants look just fine underneath.
Saturday, March 03, 2018
when to plant vegetable seeds
It's definitely time to sow seeds now. Here are some suggestions to figure out when is the best time to plant different types of seeds.
- Try the iPhone calendar apps I wrote, I use these to plan when to plant: Skippy's Vegetable Calendar App and Skippy's Flower and Herb Calendar App.
- Or try my old, very simple, and free online planting calendar: Online Vegetable Calendar.
- Johnny's online tool works pretty much the same: Johnny's planting calculator
- The University of Minnesota has a nice page on starting seeds indoors. Some tables too. So if your climate is similar to theirs, it's a good resource. UMinn Seed Starting.
- I also like a colorful chart that shows planting and harvesting times: Urban Farmer Seeds chart for USDA zone 6.
Let me know other suggestions!
- Try the iPhone calendar apps I wrote, I use these to plan when to plant: Skippy's Vegetable Calendar App and Skippy's Flower and Herb Calendar App.
- Or try my old, very simple, and free online planting calendar: Online Vegetable Calendar.
- Johnny's online tool works pretty much the same: Johnny's planting calculator
- The University of Minnesota has a nice page on starting seeds indoors. Some tables too. So if your climate is similar to theirs, it's a good resource. UMinn Seed Starting.
- I also like a colorful chart that shows planting and harvesting times: Urban Farmer Seeds chart for USDA zone 6.
Let me know other suggestions!
planting out extra lettuce
Friday, March 02, 2018
sowing seeds on a stormy day
It's pretty stormy here. Our road is blocked at both ends by downed trees and wires and our power has been out all day. In addition to tending my little onion shoots, I planted my next batch of seeds a couple days early:
Beets, Boro and Detroit Dark Red
Eggplant, Orient Express, Hansel, and Barbarella
Basil, Tuscany
Marigold, Giant African, Mission Giant Yellow, Tangerine Gem, Gem Mix, Cottage Red
Pepper, Highlander, Shishito, Ace, Red Rocket, and Red Ember
Snapdragon, Tall Deluxe Mix
Chamomile, Common
Lemon Mint
The rest of my sowing list is here: 2018 Planting Progress.
Beets, Boro and Detroit Dark Red
Eggplant, Orient Express, Hansel, and Barbarella
Basil, Tuscany
Marigold, Giant African, Mission Giant Yellow, Tangerine Gem, Gem Mix, Cottage Red
Pepper, Highlander, Shishito, Ace, Red Rocket, and Red Ember
Snapdragon, Tall Deluxe Mix
Chamomile, Common
Lemon Mint
The rest of my sowing list is here: 2018 Planting Progress.
up-potting
I've learned a new word. "Up-potting" is when you transplant into a bigger pot. Hmm. I've been spending lots of time up-potting recently as a volunteer at the greenhouses at Elm Bank. We're getting plants ready for the Boston Flower Show, which is only a couple weeks away now (March 14-18).
Thursday, March 01, 2018
newly planted seedlings in winter tunnel
I planted my seedlings out into my empty winter tunnel last weekend. They look very happy out there. I have a few more to plant out and will set up another smaller tunnel. But I'm waiting until after The Big Storm coming tomorrow.
Everyone is talking about the Storm here. 2 inches of rain and then 5 inches of heavy wet snow are predicted with high winds and power outages. I'm glad I don't need to worry about the coastal flooding in my area, because that's supposed to be really bad. Today and yesterday have been beautiful springlike days in the 60's. The dogs and I have been out enjoying it as much as we can. I suppose tomorrow will be a day to stay inside and take care of my little onion sprouts.
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