Thursday, February 16, 2012

How The First Plant Came To Be

I thought I would share this very interesting Scientific American article on how plants came to be:

How The First Plant Came To Be

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Seedling Update

Despite a few life issues that caused me to dump my last tray of peat pellets, my seed starting goes well! =) I now have 5 about 1 month old seedlings: 2 Cowhorn Pepper, 2 Thai Dill & 1 Broad Leaf Sage (ones in front in the pic below). In addition to those, I have several wee seedlings, still in the pellets. The Jiffy peat pellet greenhouses are certainly the way to go for excellent germination, in my opinion. Put a heating mat underneath it, make sure to keep the dome on & in a week you'll already have close to (if not better than) 90% germination! I now have 6 pellets each (minus one I tossed because I messed it up) of the following types of veggies: Roma VF Tomato, Brandywine Tomato, Big Rainbow Tomato, Jalapeno Pepper, California Wonder Bell Pepper & Garlic Chives. Not counting the garlic chives (as they really should be directly sown, in large numbers), I used my strong seedling selection method to get one really healthy looking seedling in each pellet. To do this, I'll start by putting 2-3 seeds of the veggie in one pellet. I'll wait for all of them to germinate, then pull the weaker looking 1 or 2 & be left with the healthiest looking seedling to eventually grow into a healthy adult plant. When detemining which one to leave & which ones to pull, I look for stem health (straight, thick, etc.). I also don't want a leggy seedling. So, the shortest healthiest looking one is usually the keeper. I also don't want ones where the seed shell has had a hard time falling off. I've used this method for years now & it's a type of unnatural selection that works very well & leaves me with healthy seedlings that I don't have to worry about babying along for several weeks to get back to what will be a healthy adult plant. :) Anyway, hope your seed starting is going well & Happy Gardening!



Friday, February 10, 2012

Seedlings So Far

I have a small handful of seedlings already growing. Some are Winter Sown herbs & the 2 peppers are from a seed viability test (where the seeds obviously ended up still being somewhat ok). I didn't expect to have pepper seedlings growing their 3rd sets of leaves in mid February! =) I will do my best to keep them in the appropriate conditions indoors, until late April/early May when I feel it's ok to move them outdoors. Below are a few pics of them.


This first pic shows my 2 Cowhorn Pepper seedlings in the front, along with a Thai Dill & a Broad Leaf Sage seedling in the back. The Sage has since started to grow another set of leaves.


This second pic is of my other 2 Thai Dill seedlings. I let these 2 grow for a bit longer in the peat pot & them seem to have taken to the potting up a lot better than the one above. The one above took almost 2 weeks after potting up before it started to grow again.



I also started a tray of seeds in peat pellets (the peat pellet greenhouse) this past Sunday. This time, I am ready for an awesome, fast germination rate, as I have all the potting up supplies already. I will try to post a pic of them this weekend, along with the 6 typed of veggies I'm growing in the greenhouse. I think I have 2 herbs, a sem-hot pepper, bell peppers & 2 types of tomatoes.


Until then, take care & Happy Gardening! - Steve

Thursday, February 9, 2012

New Site For Steve's Garden!

My e-mail associated with the other/original Blogspot account & the original Steve's Garden was discontinued after I had it for 16 years, for no good reason! I'm a little upset about this, but no big deal, as I exported my blog from that account & imported it to here. =)


The old blog site is at http://tnveggiegardner.blogspot.com/ (yes, I corrected the spelling of gardener with this one...lol).


I'm only going to keep the old site up for another week or so. So, hopefully, most if not all of my followers can make it over to this one. Please let me know what you think of the new Steve's Garden, especially the text, as I messed with it yesterday to make it a bit less plain. Thanks & Happy Gardening!