Tomatoes

I love the smell of tomato vines. It is my favorite smell either. I planted an early batch of tomatoes and finally got them transplanted today after they were way past the seed-leaf stage. I start all my seeds in trays with a seedling mix until they sprout and get those first two seed leaves (and longer if I don’t get around to it) and then put them in their final container. It works well. I’ve been mildly interested in what others do. I’m trying to remember what we did the time I took Greenhouse management and worked in the greenhouse. I think we seeded stuff in vermiculite in grooved trays, and after that transplanted to the final growing pot. Elsewhere I’ve seen soil bl0cks, plug trays, and an assortment of odd containers.

I was wondering about the small plastic tops that are frequently put on top of a seed tray. Something like that is absolutely essential for cuttings, but is it really needed for seedlings? I couldn’t remember using them (I think we might have, but I’m not sure), so I went to look it up. And found out that I sold my greenhouse textbook. This is the second time I’ve gone looking for information in it. Maybe its time to buy it again. I used my other basic horticulture textbook. It mentions using the top, or putting a plastic bag or saran wrap. It does help keep in the humidity and prevent it from drying out. I think the benefit only extends until shortly the first leaf development. I haven’t used anything. My soil retains moisture very well (wetting agents help), and I spray it down when I see it drying out. Everything is germinating quickly and well.

What do you do to start seeds?

Cold

Peter has a cold today, and it has tried my patience. I was very ready for him to go to bed at 7:00. He isn’t eating well, and is very tired. He has this pathetic little cough and sneezes out snot rockets. But he also knows to not touch such snot and let mommy or daddy wipe it off before doing anything else.

On a completely unrelated note we went to the doctor. A cold is a cold…but a red swollen hand is something to get looked at. He seems to have cut it or got a sliver at some point (I have no memory of him hurting it), and last night Joe and I realized something was amiss with it. He is on anti-biotics now for that. But my poor Pete has had a rough time lately.

Didn’t do much today. Sesame Street was on a lot, because it was often that or crying.

Spring

It’s spring! I must admit I’ve been enjoying late winter so much I’m almost sad to see it go. I guess I’m enjoying it so much because it has this tint of spring to it…and there aren’t quite as many things to get done out in the garden.  Here’s what I’ve been up to in my garden:

I built a seed starter out of an old metal shelf, shop lights, and chains. Here it is:

Not bad for $30. I started leeks a few weeks ago. Eggplant, peppers and butterfly were seeded the beginning of this week. The butterfly weed has been an interesting plant to start and I hope they turn out. I bought the seeds from Johnny’s and I have tons. To get them started, I stratified the seeds. This is a fancy term for a cold treatment, or sticking them in the refrigerator. The directions said to seed them in moist soil first and then refrigerate. I don’t have that much room, unlike greenhouses that usually have walk-in fridges. I’ve done it by putting them in vermiculite in a plastic bag, but I decide to just put the seeds in a wet paper towel inside a plastic bag.  It’s easy and it works. They were in there two weeks, which is a short stratification but still should increase the germination rate. I think it worked pretty well–I’m already beginning to see their little green seed leaves. They’ve beat the eggplant and peppers at germination rate: still no green sign from them.

Spring clean-up is well underway.  I’ve taken over landscape maintenance at my HOA, and started cleaning up the property grounds. There was a lot of winter breakage that made for a large pile of sticks, plus more from pruning a few ornamental trees. The neighborhood did a haul to the green waste facility, so all the wood is gone. The old maintenance company left piles of fall leaves and I rescued the dying grass underneath. There are still lots of leaves to clean-up due to a lack of good fall clean-up. I’m’ hoping to turn this minimally managed landscape around, and it’s really nice to have a landscape to take care of where I’m actually paid to do it instead of paying to have it done, or basically paying myself to do it.

Before pruning...

After Pruning

Over at my grandparents we pruned the peaches. I realized the twig dieback was winter-kill, and not insects/disease. The simple cultural answer is usually the right one; shame on me for blaming it on insects at first. At my grandparents we also took a hated, weedy Oregon grape and limbed it up. There was a lot of debri in and underneath the shrub, so it’s a lot cleaner now. I didn’t mind it before, but now it does have a more cultured look to it.

One almost done...

A lot less messy!

Last gardening task for this week was cleaning out a flower bed. I was hired to do this, and throughly enjoy the prospect of seeing an overgrown perennial bed changed to a vegetable garden. It was good hard work getting rid of yuccas (that have gorgeous red roots), spruces, perennials and grasses. The soils was absolutely perfect for cultivation which made our job easier. We added a layer of compost after removing the plants, and I bet this garden will soon bring forth great plants.

Halfway there...

Ready for planting

I’m still enjoying my bulbs. The crocus and Showwinner tulips are almost gone, but the early stardrift (Puschkinia libanotica), grape hyacinths  (Muscari armeniacum) and minnow daffodils are in full bloom. I love the minnow daffodils, with their itsy bitsy daffodil bloom. Still have a couple more bulbs to come up…we will see if they do.

View from my window

And now it is officially spring. Time to plant peas, lettuce and cool season crops, start planting hardy ornamental plants including all the bare root stock, cultivate soil, and maybe teach a class. It definitely is the busy season.

Last Week of Winter

Maybe it will snow…Here is a thought for all those people who hates when it snows in spring. What is more spring-like than melting snow? Then again I am perfectly happy with beautiful thunderstorms at sunset, complete with rainbows. My list of things to do is growing along with the temperatures. And life is so much more enjoyable when the weather is good. (Although I was thinking about what I do when the weather isn’t good and realized I still go outside. Peter and I hate being cooped up.)

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Some good things in my life lately:

  • Sand volleyball, 2 on 2, than 2 on 1. Me and Joe were beat by one guy.
  • Business name change to better reflect what I’m doing. And some potential clients as well…
  • Parks, and a brave Peter who tackles the slides.
  • Hyacinths, daffodils, tulips, and crocus. I bet your garden’s bulbs aren’t blooming yet.
  • Bees. Honey bees. Why in the world could you ever be scared of the best insect ever?
  • A great neighborhood with playgroups and friends.
  • Pruning fruit trees for others, just for fun.
  • Hide and Seek…dumbed down for 1.5 yr olds, including lots of saying “Boo!”
  • Tomato seedlings coming up.
  • Conversations where I have no idea what the other person is saying, but it sounds like “ba-ba oo” etc.
  • Singing at church.
  • Husband who takes over breakfast/dinner, all the clean-up, and watching Peter because I’m not feeling well.

Simplify

Today I was thinking that simplifying life isn’t necessarily doing less.

Simplifying Life is to:

Stop worrying about the 100 odd things I can’t really change or deal with right now.

Stop complicating tasks I have, over analyzing, and pushing too hard.

Living each moment instead for pushing forward to the next one.

Eliminating the junk that clutters up everywhere, in my time, house and mind.

Going slower, with a watchful eye for the good.

Plan properly, with flexibility in routines and task.

Take one thing at a time and enjoy it.

Bike Ride

We biked five miles today. It reminded me of my first date with Joe. We biked up Logan Canyon to second dam and had lunch. I remember talking and talking together. Today, we rode up Hobble Creek canyon, and made it about 2.5 miles from our home. The trail was snowy after that, and I didn’t want to ride on the road. Peter came along, of course, and enjoyed himself. He even tried to steer by putting his hands on my handlebars. I love being out and doing things with my family, even though I still feel a little cold from it.

I’ve had fun the last few days. Pete and I went on a walk with neighbor friends and played at the park. Peter would even go down the slide all by himself. The three kids were so fun to watch run around with huge smiles on. My mom and I went out to lunch and let Peter play at the mall playground. He also furthered his relationship with the escalator. At first he would cry when on it. But that didn’t last long and he was okay with it. Then he didn’t quite get on right and fell down a few steps, scraping his head. This did not damage him too much though, and he was still fine with the escalator. It started to fascinate him, and finally he would go on it just for fun.

We picked up Joe from school one day, and found a cool park in Orem. They had ducks. I remember living by the “duck park” growing up, and loved feeding the ducks. Peter wasn’t really interested…petting dogs was  a lot more fun. That night we also got 88 cent crunch wraps at Taco Bell. Eating out wasn’t in the budget, but we spent $5 for a good sized meal for all of us. I can’t always cook that cheap…and then I didn’t have to clean up either.

Peter is adorable. He says uh-oh all the time, whenever something is slightly wrong. Other common word are hot (with a very definite “t” on the end), ball, up, elmo, and mama/dada. He continues to pick up new words all the time but has yet to get most of the constants down. (Button is baba; actually lots of things are baba.) He loves being outside and cries when he comes in. But I like being outside too. Here is a picture of him at lunch today, eating cottage cheese. (The use of a spoon is still a little bit of a foreign concept, although he did eat half a bowl of oatmeal using one.)

Antsy…

I’m getting antsy to start my vegetable seeds. It’s a new project this year. In the past I’ve bought transplants, but I decided I could save money by growing them myself.

I was incorrect. I have spent way too much money on seeds, and even more on a seed starting shelf. But I’m throughly enjoying myself so it’s all worth it. I build a whole set-up for $30, much better than the systems I see that cost hundreds of dollars. I think there is little to zero difference between a “grow light” and shop light. Plants just want the photons, they don’t care so much what spectrum they are in. (Plant do “see” photons in a specific spectrum, and see less green than other colors. That’s why we see plants green. But they don’t care that much, certainly not enough to spend extra on grow lights. Incidentally, the most efficient way to grow plants is under red light. Red light doesn’t require as much energy to produce but to the plants a red photon is as good as any other.) Anyway, I purchased a couple of shop lights and I’m waiting for the time to be right to start planting. So far, I’ve started some leeks and tomatoes. (The tomatoes really don’t need to be started yet, but I had a little friend over and we were having fun.)

What to know when to start seeds? I like Johnny’s Selected Seed calender. I like Johnny’s as a company too, and ordered lots of my seeds from them. I also made my own veggie growing calender, that expands on Johnny’s a bit. Go here for more information.

The bulbs are coming up in full force too. I apparently planted a very early red tulip that’s quite pretty (I think its Showwinner). See pictures:

Day

Another day has come and gone and I am happy.

I worked hard today, and played even harder.

The day wasn’t perfect. But it wasn’t depressing or lonely either.

The highlight was planting tomato seeds with a four year old friend. Peter even planted one.

I received the most amazing heirloom seed catalog in the mail with the most unique varieties of vegetables I’ve ever seen. Vegetables are not boring.

I worked on transforming popular songs to play on my accordion. I realized the other day I would play more if I liked what I played. Too much accordion music sounds like a reincarnation of Lawrence Welk. I’m finding many recent songs I actually like go well on an accordion too.

And did I mention gardening season is coming up? So excited…

Snowstorm

Hello. I have not written in a while. Our family went snowshoeing yesterday. I was happy about another big snowstorm, since it is still winter. It meant we were able to go snowshoeing one last time. Although I think I overdid it a little, and I’m still a little tired. Early this week we were able to visit a lot of family. That was tons of fun. I miss all the friends and family we had around while we were up in Logan, but they are still fun to go visit.

Here are some random pictures. They include the curtains I finally finished, the seed starter mentioned below, a hike from a week ago, and some pictures of Peter that show why I could use a new camera. He is looking a lot older now. 

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I’m getting excited for the gardening season, which is coming up quick. We made our own seed starter, and I’ve got the leeks started and will plant more out this week. The leeks just started to show a little crack of green. I love to get in the dirt and garden: it will be fun to have a place to grow veggies this year! I’m excited for the projects I’ve got lined up as well. So far they include my parent veggies garden construction, my grandparents vegetable garden, and condo maintenance and community garden. I’m sure more will come my way as well. But first I’ve got three-ish orchards to prune.