Thursday, February 17, 2022

Four Lettuces and a Cabbage


 My indoor gardens continue to produce. I harvested enough lettuce for two small salads for myself. I grow heirloom varieties: Merveille de quatre saisons, Red sail, Rouge L’hiver, Black seeded Simpson. The cabbage is a baby tatsoi. I started several seeds in one pod, many germinated, so I harvested all but one plant so I can see if it makes a cute little mini-head. In the same spirit, I’m trying “tennis ball” lettuce, a butter head type supposed to make cute little rounds. Kale also is said to do well, and chard and arugula.


I’ve got green tomatoes! I started two types of mini-cherry types- the plants are supposed to stay small, as well as making small fruit. One red, the other orange. I transferred several of the starts to pots, and left two plants in the hydroponic machine. The hydroponic ones are blooming away! I pollinated by vibrating the clusters of flowers with an old head on my electric toothbrush (thank you, internet) and I’ve got some tiny little fruit starting to grow! This is so much more exciting even than lettuce!



Meanwhile, outside, it’s too early for anything except cleanup. But my witchhazel is blooming, as it should. Last year this time, crocuses were blooming, but not yet this year. 

Friday, January 28, 2022

Indoor Gardening

This west-facing window also has some lights
Since I always ride the trends about half a beat behind the wave, I'm now fully into indoor gardening. Some of the plants I'm raising inside will be planted outside in the summer, some will move with their pots outside and then come back in, and some will stay inside. Most of the ones to go outside were bought mail order from a specialty place. They came in four inch pots, and they will turn into giant bananas and brugmansias and blooming ginger and bouganvillea and other delights, I hope. Some are vegetables that were started in the hydroponics systems, and will be moved to pots and eventually outside.

There is a constant balancing act here - I buy plants, then need to buy furniture to put them on, and supplemental lights to help them grow. Now, with leftover pots, maybe I need some more plants? I'll be starting more seeds in the hydroponic gardens - those work really well - but then they will need to move to pots.

The cozy corner

My updated sun room lends itself to plants. I've decided I like concentrating them in that bright room, and I've also festooned the room with supplemental lights to make the growing days longer and bright every single day (even when blizzarding like right now). I spend the middle of the day out there, and in the evenings if I'm going to watch TV. It definitely has calming impacts on me to see the greenery everywhere. And, I'm enough into the mindset of the grower than I don't really see the plant itself when I look at it; I see what it could come to be when it gets bigger, puts out more branches, starts blooming.

The south window; palms and basil and cyclamen

 
The development section in the east window
Sad looking lemon and lime trees, a very bad Christmas cactus,
a cherry tomato in a hydroponic milk jug and some paperwhite bulb starts


 

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Big Dreams for the Garden

Plans

While huddling up inside in the warm, I have big dreams for my garden this coming year. I've only got one trip planned for the summer, not until the end of June, so I should be around to actually do things. And, I've decided that I have enough energy and strength to do many of these things myself (see: last year's rain gardens and rototilling for new grass). Right now, my effort consists of browsing the web and catalogues and exercising my credit card, giving me a sense of doing something without actually moving from the couch.

My long-term objective is to transform the yard into lower maintenance. Key to this goal are the strategies of (1) more container gardening, to focus my physical efforts into concentrated, manageable spaces; and (2) more shrubs and fewer perennials in the ground. Overlaid on this is the realization that many parts of my yard are not visible from inside the house. I should focus a lot of my intensive gardening on the views and the patio because constantly looking at something nudges me into action. And now, I have a much better understanding of sun patterns in my yard, and I think I'll be more realistic about what will do well where. Less wistful thinking about how there used to be sun in a spot where a decade ago I planted a tree which has grown considerably since then.

My exuberant sunny exotic plant zoo, from 2012
This is close to what I imagine
But sun/shade parts of yard are now reversed!

There is a meme that keeps showing up in gardening social media: a crowd of people shouting at the cheer leader: "what do we want?" "ALL THE PLANTS" "where will we put them?" "WE HAVE NO IDEA!" I have often fallen prey to this problem - from catalogs or at the nursery, buying things without a plan. So far, I've ordered plants and containers with a clear plan. I've also ordered many seed packets with a less clear plan, but I rationalize that as "seeds are cheap" and "they keep for years". (Both rationalizations are not necessarily true.)

I just ordered (very small) plants to go along the side street - "the court". (They won't ship until the nursery decides it's planting season.) Once upon a time the edge visible from my bedroom window was filled with four huge Norway spruces and anchored at the driveway end by a white pine that was dwarfed by the spruces. The spruces died a dozen or more years ago so I took them out, and for a while this was the sunny spot where I could grow tomatoes. On the short but steep bank to the street I planted a mix of native grasses and sedges, some of which survive to this day. I planted three small (3' high) native trees between some new raised beds for vegetables and the street. One, the hackberry, grew quickly into a nasty tangled and thorny mess so I took it out. (It has high wildlife value, so the suckers that still appear are tolerated and cut back every year.) One, a redbud, is huge and lovely every spring, but casts a big shadow. The last, a dogwood, is feeble and limping from the shade cast by the incumbent white pine (which leapt for the sky after the spruces had gone), and is on probation. The three raised beds I had put in are no longer sunny enough for tomatoes, and I haven't decided what to do with them instead. They are prime deer grazing venues, and variously but largely shady, so it's tricky. The things I've tried in past years haven't worked great.

I ordered some woody evergreens to go along here -  on the bank along the street - prostrate, low-growing pines and columnar hollies. They are supposed to tolerate some shade. We'll see if they make a decent finished-looking edge to the street. The plants I ordered will be about six inches tall, so it'll take a couple of years to find out what they actually look like.

I also ordered a couple of dwarf rhododendrons to go under the pin oak along the court side of my corner. This is very shady (though before I planted the pin oak, and for a few years after, it was sunny and had roses). So if these (6") plants survive, they will be broad-leafed evergreens, but may not bloom profusely. I do not really see this corner from inside the house (I can crane my neck from the bedroom) but having a screen along the street makes sense to me. 

For reference, existing garden spaces

I ordered two large metal raised beds which haven't come yet. (I had planned on one, but the New Year's sale catapulted me into two.) My plan for these are for the sunniest part of the yard - in the front where the big spruce fell over in the Big Wind almost four years ago. This is sloping, outside the fence, and taken over by tall prairie plants, mostly volunteers from around the 'hood. It is largely invisible from inside the house, which has let to some neglect. I have attempted to tame it each spring, and by July it is beyond me. So the current plan is for the raised beds to be installed and leveled, and to keep them civilized. I think regular rounds outside them with the weed whacker will allow them to flourish. This area is, however, on the deer highway up from the creek, so exactly what to plant in them is yet to be determined. Annuals this year, for sure, maybe big elephant ears and cannas and bananas. I may also net them to keep off the deer, though I don't like the look around ornamentals (versus vegetables). 

Outside my bedroom window on the side are azaleas and weeds. For years I have fantasized about having a lilac blooming outside my bedroom window so that I can smell it in bed (during the two weeks a year it blooms, the rest of the time it will be fairly ugly green foliage). I even bought a lilac a couple of years ago, and it died in the pot before I was ready to plant. I will have to dig up azaleas in order to make room, (may re-plant some to street-side) and the azaleas are also surrounded by weeds. It's a pretty big job, though one that could be started any time the ground isn't frozen or wet, so it doesn't need to wait until planting season. At any rate, I don't plan to buy any lilacs until I've done the work.


Sunday, January 2, 2022

Things are Blooming

 On New Year's Day, a few brave things (exotics all) were blooming. The weather is crazy unseasonably warm and seeing even a few sparse blooms lifted my spirits. 

This is a jasmine that looks like forsythia

Lavender

My epicly huge rosemary: want some?

Indoors, my first-ever forcing of paperwhites


Tuesday, December 7, 2021

The Harvest Keeps Coming

 

Before snipping (bottom) and after. 
The unit on the right has lettuce leaf basil,
Thai basil, and thyme

Today, I pulled out the scissors to cut a couple of lettuce leaves off the countertop garden to garnish my breakfast. As has happened before, the snipping continued and I ended up getting a bigger bowl, and then finally my big salad spinner to put the lettuce in. 

This countertop garden makes me so happy! I normally buy boxes of lettuce leaves at the supermarket, but lately I’ve been disappointed at how quickly they start to slime. Once some of the leaves have slimed, the whole remaining container goes in the compost pile. I suspect if I bought heads of loose leaf lettuce and washed and stored them properly I would have better luck. But I’m all about convenience. And what could be more convenient than snip-snip right there in my kitchen!

Monday, December 6, 2021

My View

 There was an unusual sky on Saturday. Also, please note not all the leaves are down so it would be silly to start raking yet. 


Sunday, November 7, 2021

Indoor Gardening

Just after planting. This also provides a
handy under-cabinet light down at the dark end of the kitchen

Two weeks ago I started up my automated hydroponic countertop garden again. I planted lettuce in the unit on the left, and herbs (mostly basil) in the unit on the right. Now, just two weeks later, I ate my first lettuce! I love this!

One of the online gardening groups I belong to had a memorable (to me) post from a woman who lives on one of the Arctic islands in the Canadian archipelago that is in the Northwest Territories. She was so excited to be able to grow fresh vegetables year round! In her tiny village, they will go weeks at a time with no flights in the winter, when they are icebound and isolated. How cool is this!

Ripe for first picking! Two weeks!

Ready to stuff into my pita sandwich