chgoeditor wrote:This is my first year in a house! I had grand plans for researching heirloom seeds, creating charts comparing the attributes of various tomato varieties, wandering the aisles of Gesthemane discussing options with the gardener-employees, you name it! Then the pandemic arrived, followed not long after by what I knew would be my last trip to Home Depot for a while. We were in the door at about 8 am and were on a mission -- grab and buy. So I did. It was cold and rainy, and I was standing outside picking over their meager herb selection. I grabbed soil and pots and the first seed packets I saw, and as I headed to the check out I saw a cart fully of scraggly tomato plants and I grabbed the first four varieties I saw. Determinate? Indeterminate? Size? Color? Time to harvest? Ha. All of that research went out the window. It was early April and I had no idea when nurseries would open or I'd next step foot in Home Depot.
Fast forward 6 weeks.
I cannot count how many times I've dragged (and wheeled -- I've since bought a dolly) pots into and out of the garage because of an impending freeze or snow. Hopefully this was the last week of that!
My tomatoes -- all indeterminate in pots, 3 large, 1 cherry -- are doing OK. I now have 3 or 4 mixed pots of herbs, but my poor basil is about to be replaced for the 3rd (and final, I hope) time. (Note to self: Don't expect basil to survive before mid-May.) I didn't know what to expect, but of the herbs the prior owner left me, the chives returned in March and the mint appeared in early April (not long after I planted replacement mint). It may be worth investing in indoor grow lights next winter to now that our herb stock (other than basil) is well established in pots.
My radishes, carrots, spinach (Bloomsdale -- the one variety of seed I knew I wanted all along!), scallions, kale and lettuce are all doing well after planting on April 3-6. Just last weekend I planted cilantro, tarragon, cucumber and zucchini seeds, but nothing has sprouted yet.
Congratulations and condolences
Welcome to the prettiest and most delicious (hopefully!) of all addictions.
Gardening in Chiberia is frustrating in that our season does NOT start when the commercials do. Unless you have a serious indoor grow light set up, it’s really tough to grow from seed before late April and even then, it’s challenging. And I’ve learned not to plant anything outside—in ground or containers—even the stuff they say is cool weather friendly—until early May. Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, etc, really can’t be planted here until after Mother’s Day. But the good news is, unless we’re super unlucky (hasn’t happened in many years), we can grow almost everything until end of October. so it kind of works out.
Garden stores are open—many with on-line ordering and contact-free pick up. The challenging part is finding veggie inventory. But I’ve planted seeds for most things this late and still gotten fruit. It doesn’t hurt to try. Just don’t take any hot weather seedlings outside unless it’s sunny and over 70 degrees since it will just stress them out. And it’s the perfect time to plant greens, herbs (except basil), peas/beans/root veg/corn in ground.
Most of all, plant flowers (the veggies need them) and enjoy the view. There’s nothing better for relieving stress with everything we have going on right now. Have fun and keep us posted!!
"Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit; wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad." Miles Kington