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Garlic

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Garlic, so easy and so hard at the same time. I ordered two types of garlic for fall planting in July 2023: - Hard Neck Roja - Soft Neck Nootka. I received them September 29, 2023 and planted all 80 on October 30, 2023. You are suppose to plant garlic in October/November for zone 7. The harvest date for both is 240 days (harvest: July 29, 2024). I planted just like the instructions and internet gurus suggested but now I have stalks that are a foot+ tall. The internet says if they are sprouts not to worry - but this?! These are huge!  Today, December 30, 2023, I covered the base of the stalks with another layer of leaves (additional to the layer Mother Nature laid on them) and emailed Burpee to see if I am doing the right thing. One internet site says August is harvest time for garlic - well that math doesn't work in Virginia. If I wanted to harvest in August - I should have waited until winter and planted them December 18th. If anyone has any ideas - please let me know.

Thinking 2024 Garden Stuff

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For Christmas, I received seeds from  Smart Seed Emporium (my husband knows me well). I had the bolded ones on my wish list and the rest/duplicates were sent as gifts from the company: Watermelon Radish x2, Rainbow Radish x2, Kamari Melon , Goliath Tomato (Heirloom), Glass Gem Corn (popcorn), and Rainbow Cherry Tomato Collection (Heirloom): Mexico Midget, Black Cherry, Matt's Wild Cherry, Isis Candy, and Snow White. Strawberry Clover x2, Crimson Clover x2 I am really excited to learn how the seeds work and there is little room for error. Some of these seeds are rare - meaning $$$ for a few seeds. I feel like Jack and the Bean Stalk with a few seeds to grow the mighty vine to the Golden Goose. The Glass Gem Corn looks like sea glass. On Etsy, you can buy the seeds to pop - when popped, the corn is white but the kernel remains the same color as the seed - so pretty. Look here to find it on Etsy. The Kamari Melon is way cool! It will produce 6-9 fruits per vine and likes a lit

End of the Garden Season for me ...

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Yes, I know there is a place for winter crops and I planted 15 turnips that never showed and 2/3 of my Kale plants were stolen by a vermint (I even enclosed the little plants). Winter crops will have to wait. I DID grow 5 pumpkins though. 2 are orange and "Halloween" like, 2 are peach colored and 'long in the face', the last one was a white/blue pumpkin and it didn't last very long. Questions I have for the universe: Was it good garden soil? My daughter bought me a soil testing kit from amazon for me to try. Was there enough soil? Are the raised beds as full as they need to be? How do I really use fertilizer in the garden? What fertilizer do I use? Were my plants too crowded? Yes; how do I stop my compulsion to plant everything in sight? Road to Redemption: READING: I bought a book by Mike McGrath, Growing Great Tomatoes , and I have read half. So far, I did almost everything wrong from he start (but I had fun - so there's that). I also found a book in my lib

Mid July, 2023: Did I really need all those tomato plants ... YES, yes I did!

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It's mid July here in Virginia and the garden is in full swing. I have learned a lot along the way. I have added a diagram of the plot and a video below. SOIL I just used the soil we had, added more topsoil from the stone store and some compost. Not very scientific - or - the best idea. I think there is something wrong with the soil. I bought a kit to test it, when the results come back, I'll have a better understanding of what to do to correct it all. STARTING FROM SEED This was a great idea and saved me a ton of money (except that I buy every seed packet in sight). When I buy seed packets, I do a lot of research, then throw all that knowledge out the window and just buy seeds. I did buy some from an online company and they just aren't great - the taste is bland and not such a great bounty. March/April: Starting seeds in cups: I had some left over styrofoam cups and plastic cocktail cups - so I used them. I poked holes in the bottom of the styrofoam cups, added moist seed

DAY 5: Building the Greenhouse: Finished

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It has taken a while to get this post out but not because the greenhouse took so long. It's taken a while because as soon as it was finished - everything went into warp speed! I absolutely LOVE this greenhouse. Hands down, the best present Jim has ever given to me.  We built the house in the garage and, because it was also light weight, walked it over to the site Jim had prepared. The site was anchored because of windy days off the river and we screwed the greenhouse to the base. Then we laid and stapled the hard-cloth and added pebbles for flooring. The doors remain quirky and don't close 100% at the top. I thought that would prove problematic but not so (though the engineer gives it side-eye every time he passes it). To finish it up, Jim built some work tables with hardware cloth. I added two chairs and a table for a reflection area, and the bed of pebbles was a perfect flooring. Jim insisted that we add stepping stones (good call).  To doll it up, I bought the greenhouse han

DAY 4: Building the Greenhouse: Selecting the perfect spot

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  4 Hours Read a lot, thought a lot, then did what I thought best knowing how the river works. You are supposed to position your greenhouse so that a wall side is facing South East. That's all well and good; and if I did that, I would lose the house to gusts o wind coming from the river. Instead, I positioned the doors of the greenhouse South East knowing that in the spring, summer and fall this spot receives at least 6-8 hours of sun-rise to early afternoon sun before the cedars begin to cast shade over the site. The sun will make my plants grow without blistering the leaves and the shade will protect them from heavy afternoon sun. The picture below shows January sun at 3:00-3:30pm. Today we selected, and constructed the frame of the greenhouse. Jim bought 6 foundation blocks, readjusted them to fit 4x4 beams and put it all together.  Next weekend, we will anchor the structure, add the weed cloth and about 2-3 inches of pea gravel. SO CLOSE!

DAY 3: Building the Greenhouse; Don't Over Think - Just follow the plan

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  3 Hours The toughest part of today's construction - reading the plans and figuring out what it wanted us to do. This was an easier task for the engineer (I had to walk away once or twice). The panels for the top went in really easy. Just don't over think it - follow the plan and it will all work out. The doors were a nightmare and will need to be adjusted once it is on location.